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Considered by many to be the world’s first computer programmer, Ada Lovelace was an English mathematician and writer born in 1815. She collaborated with inventor Charles Babbage on his general purpose computing machine, the Analytical Engine, and published what we would now call a computer program to generate Bernoulli Numbers. Whilst Babbage had written fragments of programs before, Lovelace's was the most complete, most elaborate, and the first published.

More importantly, she was the first person to foresee the creative potential of the Engine. Lovelace explained how it could do so much more than merely calculate numbers, and could potentially create music and art, given the right programming and inputs. Her vision of computing's possibilities was unmatched by any of her peers and went unrecognized for a century. That mistake was however rightfully fixed, and now October 11th is known as Ada Lovelace Day - an international celebration of the achievements of women in science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM). It aims to increase the profile of women in STEM and, in doing so, create new role models who will encourage more girls into these careers and support women who are already working in them.

Because of Ada’s accomplishments, we can today enjoy what we love the most - video games. We would like to thank her and celebrate this special day in a true GOG fashion: by giving you guys special deals on awesome puzzle and simulation titles that would undoubtedly interest Ada Lovelace herself!

Check out what we have in store for you and build a cat-to-human translation system as a machine learning specialist in while True: learn () (33% off), take on the role of a Reactor Engineer and construct elaborate factories to transform raw materials into valuable chemical products in SpaceChem (75% off) or automate swarms of office workers to solve puzzles inside your very own parallel computer made of people in 7 Billion Human (50% off)!

Of course, that’s not even half of it - check out all the discounted titles here. Our sale celebration lasts until October 17th, 1 PM UTC!
Oh... at first I thought is about the GPU launch. :P
When I hear the name Lovelace, I'm afraid I'm thinking of somebody else altogether...
Neat, but how about Alan Turing or Grace Murray Hopper? When I think of computing history, Lovelace is somewhere in the range of a footnote compared to those two.

Admiral Hopper was a real G, ya know?
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fronzelneekburm: When I hear the name Lovelace, I'm afraid I'm thinking of somebody else altogether...
Linda Lovelace was also the first person my mind conjured. GOG's got enough...uh, appropriate games now that they could well have a sale themed around her! :P
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toma85: with Ada.Text_IO;

procedure Hello is
begin
Ada.Text_IO.Put_Line("Hello, world!");
end Hello;
I was about to propose all "hello world" programs written today to dump "hello Ada" to commemorate the ocasion but it will change nothing in the long run...
Would else Heart.Break() not also be on theme? https://www.gog.com/en/game/else_heartbreak
Just make sure that Hello World program is simpler than this (satirical) example:
https://gist.github.com/lolzballs/2152bc0f31ee0286b722

Not posting it in the message body because it's too long. (Wait, a Hello World program is too long?)
still the same discounts.. shenzhen i/o 50% again and again
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dtgreene: Just make sure that Hello World program is simpler than this (satirical) example:
https://gist.github.com/lolzballs/2152bc0f31ee0286b722

Not posting it in the message body because it's too long. (Wait, a Hello World program is too long?)
Hahaha made my day!
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GOG.com: Because of Ada’s accomplishments, we can today enjoy what we love the most - video games.
I presume this refers GOG staff and not it's customers as well? I like gaming good games from the time to time, but it is nowhere near being the thing I love most.
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dtgreene: Just make sure that Hello World program is simpler than this (satirical) example:
https://gist.github.com/lolzballs/2152bc0f31ee0286b722

Not posting it in the message body because it's too long. (Wait, a Hello World program is too long?)
You want extreme "Hello, World!" ? Check this out:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LnzuMJLZRdU

That's episode 1 of a 9-part series to write a "Hello, World!" program. Homie starts with a 6502 and a breadboard and builds the machine to run the program on.