Arthur Norman (computer scientist) explained
Arthur C. Norman is a British computer scientist,[1] and Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, where he has previously been a Director of Studies for Computer Science.
Education
Awarded a distinction in computer science in 1970.[2]
Teaching
Norman delivered his last lecture at the Computer Laboratory on 3 December 2008 [1] but his notes are still used as teaching resources.[3] The Trinity College Science Society often has Dr. Norman back for talks.[4] [5]
Publications
- Norman, A. and Cattell, G. 1983. "LISP on the B. B. C. Microcomputer" AcornSoft, Cambridge, England.[6]
- Matooane, M. and Norman, A "A Parallel Symbolic Computation Environment: Structures and Mechanics." Euro-Par 1999: 1492-1495
- Norman, A. and Fitch, J "CABAL: polynomial and power series algebra on a parallel computer." PASCO 1997: 196-203
- Norman, A. and Fitch, J. "Interfacing REDUCE to Java." DISCO 1996: 271-276
- Norman, A. and Fitch, J. "Memory Tracing of Algebraic Calculations." ISSAC 1996: 113-119
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Computer Laboratory: 2008-03-12: Arthur Norman's last lecture . Cl.cam.ac.uk . 2016-12-15.
- Web site: Multithreading - The Delphi Way . Seti.net . 2016-12-15.
- Web site: Unix Tools . Markus Kuhn . Cl.cam.ac.uk . 2016-12-15.
- Web site: Trinity College Science Society . Tcss.soc.srcf.net . 2016-12-15.
- Web site: Trinity College Science Society . Tcss.soc.srcf.net . 2016-12-15.
- Book: LISP on the B. B. C. Microcomputer . Arthur Norman . Gillian Cattell . 9780907876083 . Amazon.co.uk . 1983 . 2016-12-15.