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English Dictionary: Vannevar Bush by the DICT Development Group
2 results for Vannevar Bush
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
Vannevar Bush
n
  1. United States electrical engineer who designed an early analogue computer and who led the scientific program of the United States during World War II (1890-1974)
    Synonym(s): Bush, Vannevar Bush
From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (15Feb98) [foldoc]:
   Vannevar Bush
  
      Dr. Vannevar Bush, 1890-1974.   The man who invented
      {hypertext}, which he called {memex}, in the 1930s.
  
      Bush did his undergraduate work at Tufts College, where he
      later taught.   His masters thesis (1913) included the
      invention of the Profile Tracer, used in surveying work to
      measure distances over uneven ground.   In 1919, he joined
      {MIT}'s Department of Electrical Engineering, where he stayed
      for twenty-five years.   In 1932, he was appointed
      vice-president and dean.   At this time, Bush worked on optical
      and photocomposition devices, as well as a machine for rapid
      selection from banks of microfilm.
  
      Further positions followed: president of the Carnegie
      Institute in Washington, DC (1939); chair of National Advisory
      Committee for Aeronautics (1939); director of Office of
      Scientific Research and Development.   This last role was as
      presidential science advisor, which made him personally
      responsible for the 6,000 scientists involved in the war
      effort.   During World War II, Bush worked on radar antenna
      profiles and the calculation of artillery firing tables.   He
      proposed the development of an {analogue computer}, which
      later became the {Rockefeller Differential Analyser}.
  
      Bush is the pivotal figure in hypertext research.   His
      ground-breaking 1945 paper, "As We May Think," speculated on
      how a machine might be created to assist human reasoning, and
      introduced the idea of an easily accessible, individually
      configurable storehouse of knowledge.   This machine, which he
      dubbed "memex," in various ways anticipated {hypermedia} and
      the {World Wide Web} by nearly half a century.
  
      {Electronic Labyrinth article
      (http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/elab/hfl0034.html)}.
  
      {Bush's famous article, "As We May Think"
      (http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/flashbks/computer/bushf.htm)}.
  
      (2001-06-17)
  
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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