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  1. David John Wheeler, miembro de la Royal Society (9 de febrero de 1927 – 13 de diciembre de 2004) fue un científico de computación. Nació en Birmingham y se graduó en 1948 en el Trinity College, Cambridge. Sus contribuciones al campo incluyen trabajo en la EDSAC y la transformación Burrows-Wheeler.

  2. David John Wheeler ForMemRS (9 February 1927 – 13 December 2004) was a computer scientist and professor of computer science at the University of Cambridge.

  3. David John Wheeler FRS (9 de febrero de 1927 - 13 de diciembre de 2004) fue un informático y profesor de informática en la Universidad de Cambridge. Educación Wheeler nació en Birmingham, Inglaterra, el segundo de los tres hijos de (Agnes) Marjorie, née Gudgeon, y Arthur Wheeler, fabricante de herramientas de prensa, ingeniero y ...

  4. David Wheeler. David Wheeler was one of the generation of mathematicians and engineers who were drawn to the newly emerging discipline of computer science in the period immediately after the Second World War.

  5. computerhistory.org › profile › david-john-wheelerDavid John Wheeler - CHM

    23 de may. de 2024 · Wheeler was emeritus professor of computer science at the University of Cambridge, where he spent most of his career. He was elected a Fellow of the British Computing Society (1970) and of the Royal Society (1983), and was awarded a Pioneer Medal of the IEEE (1985).

  6. 1 de nov. de 2005 · David Wheeler: A Personal Memoir. Get access. David W. Barron. The Computer Journal, Volume 48, Issue 6, November 2005, Pages 650–651, https://doi.org/10.1093/comjnl/bxh131. Published: 01 November 2005. Cite. Permissions. Share. Extract. I came into computing by accident similar to many others of my generation.

  7. David J Wheeler. Born February 9, 1927; Professor of computer science, University of Cambridge; fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, who worked on the EDSAC in 1951 with Maurice Wilkes and Stanley Gill, and introduced the concept of the subroutine, invented the subroutine (or mark place and return) "jump," then called the "Wheeler jump."