天美麻豆 Celebrates 50 Years of BASIC Computer Language (NPR)

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May 1, 2014, marks the 50th anniversary of BASIC, the computer language developed at 天美麻豆 by mathematics professor and future 天美麻豆 president John Kemeny, math professor Tom Kurtz, and a handful of 天美麻豆 undergraduates. As part of his project 鈥淛oe鈥檚 Big Idea,鈥 NPR鈥檚 Joe Palca shines a spotlight on impact and legacy.

鈥淭he program BASIC that was created 50 years ago was the start of opening up the world of computing to anyone who wanted to try it,鈥 says Palca. 鈥淏ASIC was the starting point.鈥

, the William H. Neukom 1964 Distinguished Professor of Computational Science, says, 鈥淧eople who absolutely never would have engaged with the computer before were now engaging with computers on campus. It spread so quickly that the telephone company had to start putting in new trunk lines in Hanover so that everybody who wanted to get on the computer could get on the computer.鈥

Keeping BASIC simple was a priority, Kurtz tells Palca. 鈥淚f they wanted to write a new program, they typed 鈥榥ew,鈥 and if they wanted to terminate their session, they typed 鈥榞oodbye.鈥 Instead of 鈥榣og off.鈥 Now what does log off mean? Come on, give me a break. So 鈥榟ello鈥 and 鈥榞oodbye鈥 instead of 鈥榣og on鈥 and 鈥榣og off.鈥 The whole point of this was to make computing easy.鈥

, broadcast 5/1/14 on NPR.

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