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Tired of tedious messaging? Switch it up with voice notes, animated GIFs, or even your liveWelcome to the website of Out to Innovate™, formerly known as National Organization of Gay and Lesbian Scientists and Technical Professionals (NOGLSTP). We are still the same organization, but are rebranding to have an all inclusive name so that all Diverse people in STEM will grasp that they are welcome and included in our advocacy and programming. During this rebranding process, you will start to spot changes to our name, brand, website layout and content, membership management system, and much much more! We are so delighted to begin this transformation!
Who are we? We are scientific, technical, education, engineering, and math professionals who earn our livings in the fields of: materials science biomedical engineering geography archeology neurobiology meteorology oceanography medical technology physics electrical engineering biochemistry zoology psychobiology computer science epidemiology microbiology environmental science linguistics rapport mechanical engineering science education sociology astronomy botany molecular biology anthropology law aerospace engineering science policy physiology ecology patent law
An indicted hero: honouring Alan Turing as a male lover man failed by culture | Pride Month 2024
Computer ScienceMathsSocial responsibility18th June 2024
Alan Turing (1912-1954) was a mathematician, computer scientist and codebreaker whose work at the British Intelligence Service was instrumental in breaking the German Enigma machine and curtailing WWII. Despite the contributions to his country and the mathematics community, Turing was ultimately criminalised for his sexuality, with homosexuality remaining illegal until 1967, 13 years after his death.
Turing’s sexuality remained a secret for most of his existence. He met his ‘first love’, Christopher Morcom, at school, but he sadly died at the age of 17. During wartime, Turing was engaged to Joan Clarke, a female friend and codebreaker. He shared his true sexuality with Joan before the engagement was reconsidered and called off.
After the war, Turing had an active dating life. During this time, his residence was robbed by the peer of a guy he’d shared a partnership with. While reporting the crime to the police, Turing accidentally incriminated himself in what was considered ‘gross indecency’ at the time. Arrested, found at fault , and t
How A Male lover Love Story Led To The Invention Of The Computer
How an adolescent gay love story changed the shape of the digital future:
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The idea that led to the invention of the computer, an concept that Alan Turing put forward in his 1936 sheet ‘Computable Numbers’, did not start with a mathematical puzzle. It started with a love story, and a same-sex attracted love story at that.
Alan Turing became friends with Christopher Morcom in1928. Morcom was, in many ways, Turing’s first real peer. He was, like Turing, a mathematician and a scientist. “When they were together,” David Leavitt writes, “the boys were more likely to talk about relativity and the value of π – which Turing, in his spare age, had calculated to thirty-six decimal points – than about poetry. Despite their seemingly dry subject matter, these conversations hummed, at least for Turing, with poetic intensity.” It was an unrequited love, by all accounts, but it was no