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  1. www.computerhistory.org › profile › steve-furberSteve Furber - CHM

    5 de jun. de 2024 · Steve Furber was born in Manchester, England, in 1953. He received a BA in mathematics in 1974 and a PhD in aerodynamics in 1980, both from the University of Cambridge. He is ICL Professor of Computer Engineering in the School of Computer Science at the University of Manchester.

  2. Hace 3 días · Hauser quickly drafted in Steve Furber (who had been working for Acorn on a voluntary basis since the ACE fruit machine project) and Sophie Wilson to help complete a revised version of the Proton which met the BBC's specifications.

  3. www.computerhistory.org › profile › sophie-wilsonSophie Wilson - CHM

    Now working at Acorn, she and colleague Steve Furber took less than a week to design and implement the prototype of what became the BBC Microcomputer. Furber and Wilson refined their design over the same summer, with Wilson designing the operating system and writing the BBC basic interpreter.

  4. 9 de jun. de 2024 · The second was a visit by Steve Furber and Sophie Wilson to the Western Design Center, a company run by Bill Mensch and his sister, which had become the logical successor to the MOS team and was offering new versions like the WDC 65C02.

  5. Hace 6 días · Sophie, an alumna of the department, co-designed, with her colleague Steve Furber, the BBC Microcomputer, BBC BASIC and the Acorn Assembler. They then went on to design the ARM processor, which originally powered Acorn's computers, and is now the core of virtually every mobile phone and tablet in the world – 75 billion ARM-powered ...

  6. ercim-news.ercim.eu › en125 › specialBuilding Brains

    17 de jun. de 2024 · by Steve Furber (The University of Manchester) SpiNNaker – a Spiking Neural Network Architecture – is the world’s largest neuromorphic computing system.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Arm_HoldingsArm Holdings - Wikipedia

    Hace 2 días · Attempted acquisition by Nvidia and initial public offering. American technology company Nvidia announced plans on 13 September 2020 to acquire ARM from SoftBank, pending regulatory approval, for a value of US$40 billion in stock and cash, which would have been the largest semiconductor acquisition to that date.