Ada Lovelace: The Victorian Visionary Who Invented Computer Programming.​#AdaLovelace #Womenpower

Ada Lovelace: The Victorian Visionary Who Invented Computer Programming.​#AdaLovelace #Womenpower

A hundred years before the first computer was built, one woman already knew how to program it. ​Ada Lovelace was the daughter of a scandalous poet and a mathematical mother. Born into Victorian high society, she used her unique "poetical science" to see something no one else could: that a machine made of gears and steam could do more than just calculate—it could create. ​In this video, we explore the life of the woman who wrote the world's first computer algorithm and predicted that machines would one day compose music and process scientific data. ​Inside this episode: ​The Daughter of Lord Byron: How a turbulent childhood led to a passion for logic. ​The Analytical Engine: Ada’s partnership with Charles Babbage and his "universal machine." ​Note G: A deep dive into the Bernoulli number algorithm—the world’s first code. ​The Jacquard Loom: How silk weaving inspired the future of computing. ​A Century Ahead: Why it took 100 years for the world to catch up to Ada’s vision. ​"The Analytical Engine weaves algebraic patterns just as the Jacquard loom weaves flowers and leaves." — Ada Lovelace ​Ada Lovelace predicted that computers would eventually create art and music. Looking at AI today, do you think she’d be surprised by how far we’ve come? Let’s talk in the comments! ​#AdaLovelace #WomenInSTEM #ComputerScience #CodingHistory #TechVisionary #AnalyticalEngine #Programming #Mathematics