Loe ja kuula

Astu lugude lõputusse maailma

  • Proovi tasuta
  • Loe ja kuula nii palju, kui soovid
  • Suurim valik eestikeelseid raamatuid
  • Kokku üle 700 000 raamatu 4 keeles
Proovi tasuta
Device Banner Block-copy 894x1036
Cover for Lord Byron and Ada Lovelace: The Lives of the Father and Daughter Who Scandalized Victorian Britain

Lord Byron and Ada Lovelace: The Lives of the Father and Daughter Who Scandalized Victorian Britain

Kestus
2 h 15 min
Keel
inglise
Vorming
Kategooria

Elulood

Lord Byron’s very name conjures up visions of the Romantic movement and outlandishly dressed bohemians, for if Alfred, Lord Tennyson was the poetic darling of the masses, Byron was the hero of the hedonists. While the traditional English literary hero was a nobleman rescuing a damsel in distress, Byron created the anti-hero, a man plagued by self-doubt and hidden sorrow. At the same time, his hero was also capable of facing reality once he had wrestled through his own angst, and even of occasionally acting nobly in the great tradition of the author’s Puritan forebears.

If Byron himself was eclectic in his tastes and character, his poetry was even more so, for he could feature satiric pieces poking fun at the status quo and historical renditions of ancient battles fought with nobility and valor, all in the same volume. Like so many other writers, he used poetry to explore his own most deeply guarded secrets, in one poem playing in first person the dramatic hero and in another the troubled penitent. He was sometimes funny, sometimes lyrical, and sometimes verbose, but he was always interesting, and that is what allowed him to become one of the most famous writers of all time, almost against his own will, and despite his premature death.

Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace were the first to conceive the notion of a programmable and automatic universal computer, which, on top of its ability to calculate any mathematical equation at an unmatched speed, could also be used for a seemingly infinite number of other applications. In other words, they envisioned the precursor to the modern computer. It was certainly an unusual path for any woman, and she managed to do so before an incredibly premature death. Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace, died in 1852 at the age of 36, but during her short and tumultuous life, she was one of the first to recognize that computers could do far more than complex calculations.

© 2025 Charles River Editors (Audioraamat): 9798318219931

Väljaandmise kuupäev

Audioraamat: 16. juuli 2025

Vali pakett

  • Kokku üle 700 000 raamatu 4 keeles

  • Suur valik eestikeelseid raamatuid

  • Uusi raamatuid iga nädal

  • Kids Mode lastesõbralik keskkond

Populaarne

Unlimited

14.99 € /kuus
  • 1 konto

  • Kuula ja loe piiramatult

  • Tühista igal ajal

Proovi kohe

Unlimited (aastane)

119.99 € /aasta
  • 1 konto

  • Kuula ja loe piiramatult

  • Säästa 33%

Proovi kohe