Reproducido
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The Neanderthals
Brian Cox and Robin Ince are joined by hominids Alan Davies, Neanderthal expert and author Rebecca Wragg Sykes, and paleontologist and woolly mammoth expert Tori Herridge and learn just how misunderstood our ancestors have been. The image of the lumbering, ape like, simple, grunting Neanderthal has been turned on its head with the discovery that we are far more related to Neanderthals then we ever thought possible. Nearly all Europeans will have around 2% Neanderthal DNA, and the revelation of widespread interbreeding between Neanderthals and modern humans has turned the idea of our exceptionalism on its head. It seems that what defines us may have defined the Neanderthals as well, and we are not so different after all.
Producer: Alexandra Feachem
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We're back for our second show! This week Professors Sue Black OBE and Gordon Love are joined by the most influential woman in tech in the UK in 2020 - Dr Anne-Marie Imafidon MBE to discuss inclusivity and the history of women in tech including the life, innovation and lasting legacy of Ada Lovelace.
Also in this episode, Durham’s Head of Computer Science explains the science and fascinating history behind the development of computer programmes.
You can email your suggestions for moments for Sue and Gordon to look at using [email protected]
For those interested in studying Computer Science at Durham, visit
https://www.durham.ac.uk/departments/academic/computer-science/ to find out how you can apply.
If you enjoyed this episode please do three lovely things for us - like, subscribe and tell a friend!
100 Moments that Rocked Computer Science is a Why did the Chicken? production for Durham University. -
With the recent launch of the new £50 note featuring Alan Turing – what better time for us to be joined by his nephew, Sir Dermot Turing as he talks to Professor Sue Black OBE - who led the campaign to save Bletchley Park!
Dermot provides a truly insightful background into his uncle’s computational model that created a brand new branch of mathematics and had such a lasting impact on computer science. He also discusses Turing’s remarkable code-breaking work at Bletchley Park in WW2 which helped to fundamentally shift the outcome of the conflict.
Also in this episode, the team reveal how the Turing machine was the blueprint for the digital computer we all know and rely on so much today.
You can email your suggestions for moments for Sue and Gordon to look at using [email protected]
For those interested in studying Computer Science at Durham, visit https://www.durham.ac.uk/departments/academic/computer-science/ to find out how you can apply.
If you enjoyed this episode please do three lovely things for us - like, subscribe and tell a friend!
100 Moments that Rocked Computer Science is a Why did the Chicken? production for Durham University. -
It’s the series finale and what a way to end an incredible first series! This week Professors Sue Black OBE and Gordon Love welcome Megan Smith, Barack Obama’s ex CTO, to discuss the emergence of civic technology and the huge potential for good it can have on society and economies plus her brilliant work with the then US President, big data challenges, the increasing problem of bias in AI.
Also in this episode, Sue and Gordon take a look at some of the forerunners and shining examples in this social revolution and how it’s shaping the landscape of the future.
You can email your suggestions for moments for Sue and Gordon to look at using [email protected]
For those interested in studying Computer Science at Durham, visit: https://www.durham.ac.uk/departments/academic/computer-science/ to find out how you can apply.
If you enjoyed this episode please do three lovely things for us - like, subscribe and tell a friend!
100 Moments that Rocked Computer Science is a Why did the Chicken? production for Durham University.