The Death of Sappho (1876) by Gustave Moreau
The Tower of Babel (François de Nomé, 1630)
Norway, 1988
raffaella cerullo & elena greco | the story of the lost child, by elena ferrante / hbo l'amica geniale / nbc hannibal's script / letters to milena, by kafka / the story of the lost child, by elena ferrante / anna akhmatova tr. by judith hemschemeyer, “poem without a hero” / bts l'amica geniale / twin flame, by weyes blood / wuthering heights, by emily brönte / my brilliant friend, by elena ferrante
Uncredited Photographer Young Member of the French Anti-fascist Resistance 1944
Fontainebleau State Park, Mandeville, Louisiana by Lana Gramlich
Watercolour portrait of Ada King, Countess of Lovelace also known as Ada Lovelace, ca. 1840, possibly by Alfred Edward Chalon.
Ada Lovelace, is celebrated as the first computer programmer. In the early 19th century, she wrote detailed notes on Charles Babbage’s Analytical Engine, a pioneering mechanical computer.
Among these notes was an algorithm designed to compute Bernoulli numbers, which is recognized as the first published computer program. At a time when computing was an uncharted territory, Lovelace envisioned the potential of machines to perform complex tasks beyond basic arithmetic.
Her foresight and contributions laid the groundwork for modern computer science.
She was also the daughter of the poet Lord Byron.
ph. Danko Maksimovic - Syracuse, Sicily (2024)
Film: Kodak Pro Image 100