Saul Rosen
Saul Rosen | |
---|---|
Born |
Port Chester, New York | February 8, 1922
Died |
June 9, 1991 69) West Lafayette, Indiana | (aged
Alma mater | University of Pennsylvania |
Thesis | Modular Transformations of Certain Series (1950) |
Doctoral advisor | Hans Adolph Rademacher |
Notable awards | ACM Distinguished Service Award 1984 |
Saul Rosen (February 8, 1922 – June 9, 1991) was an American computer science pioneer. He is known for designing the software of the first transistor-based computer Philco Transac S-2000, and for his work on programming language design which influenced the ALGOL language.[1]
In 1947, he was involved in establishing the Association for Computing Machinery; in particular he was the first editor of its journal Communications of the ACM. In 1979 he co-founded the journal Annals of the History of Computing, then published by AFIPS.[1]
Selected publications
- Saul Rosen (1953). "Modular transformation of certain series". Duke Mathematical Journal. 20 (4): 593—599. doi:10.1215/s0012-7094-53-02060-2.
- Saul Rosen (Jan 1967). Programming Systems and Languages. McGraw Hill Computer Science Series. New York/NY: McGraw Hill. ISBN 0070537089.
- Saul Rosen (Jul 1968). Electronic Computers —- A Historical Survey in Print (Computer Science Technical Report). Purdue University Department.
- Saul Rosen (1990). The Origins of Modern Computing (Computer Science Technical Report / Purdue e-Pubs). Purdue University.
- Saul Rosen (Sep 1990). "The Origins of Modern Computing". Computing Reviews. 31 (9): 449—481.
- Saul Rosen (Jun 1991). PHILCO: Some Recollections of the PHILCO TRANSAC S-2000 (Computer Science Technical Reports / Purdue e-Pubs). Purdue University.
References
External links
- Saul Rosen at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- Vita at rcac.purdue.edu
- A Tribute to Those No Longer With Us, slide 2-9
- Publications at DBLP
- Pictures of Rosen via cs.purdue.edu:
- 5 Apr 1966, handling a magnetic tape
- 5 Apr 1966, at the typewriter
- 30 Jul 1968, portrait
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