Unravelling The Mystery: Behind Our Room Names – Parkway Parade

Dijkstra, Feynman and Turing. What's the story behind these esteemed scientists? Who are they and what did they do?

Coding Lab Parkway Parade Room 1: Dijkstra

Room 1. Djikstra

Edsger Wybe Dijkstra, inspiration for Coding Lab PP Room 1

Our first room was named after Edsger Wybe Dijkstra (11 May 1930 – 6 August 2002), a Dutch computer scientist and pioneer of computer science [1].

Dijkstra's Algorithm

What is Dijkstra's Algorithm? (GIF from Combinatorica)

Best known for: Djikstra's Algorithm [2]

  • Also known as the shortest-path algorithm

  • Finds the shortest way to move from one place to another 

  • The foundation for the recommended route feature on Google Maps [34].

"Computer science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes."

Did you know? Djikstra was the first Dutch computer programmer [5].

Coding Lab Parkway Parade Room 2: Feynman

Room 2. Feynman

Richard Philips Feynman, Inspiration for Coding Lab PP Room 2

Feynman died at 69, after a long battle with cancer (Photo from Britannica)

The second room was inspired by Richard Phillips Feynman (11 May 1918 – 15 February 1998) an American theoretical physicist and musician (known for his bongo-playing, made popular by Sheldon from The Big Bang Theory [6]) who worked on the first nuclear bomb [7] and investigated the crash of space shuttle Challenger [8].

The Feynman Diagram

What is the Feynman Diagram? (GIF from Medium)

Best known for: The Feynman diagram [9]

  • Won him the Nobel Prize in Physics 1965 for his work on quantum electrodynamics [10, 11]

  • A simplified visual representation of the mathematical expressions that describe the movements of subatomic particles that facilitates understanding, provides good approximations to reality

  • Contributes to many physicists' evolving theories of particle interactions today [12].

"The worthwhile problems are the ones you can really solve or help solve, the ones you can really contribute something to... No problem is too small or too trivial if we can really do something about it."

Did you know?The Feynman Lectures on Physics from Feynman's Caltech lectures is one of the most popular physics lectures, and are now available online for free.

Coding Lab Parkway Parade Room 3: Turing

Room 3. Turing

Alan Turing, inspiration for Coding Lab PP Room 3

Alan Turing died at the age of 41 from cyanide poisoning (Photo from The New Yorker)

Finally, the third room got its name from the Father of Modern Computer Science, Alan Mathison Turing (23 June 1912 – 7 June 1954). In addition to being part of the team that cracked the Germans' Enigma code during World War II, the British computer scientist, mathematician, cryptanalyst and theoretical biologist also built the foundations of artificial intelligence and modern computers [13, 14].

An example of how the Turing Machine works (GIF from Gifer)

An example of how the Turing Machine works (GIF from Gifer)

Best known for: The Turing Machine [15]

  • A hypothetical machine with a tape of infinite length where operations are performed and could be used to simulate any algorithmic computation

  • The first concept of a 'universal computing machine' – that anything that is computable can be computed by one machine [16]

  • The predecessor of the modern computer that could solve complex computations; used basic data storage and symbol manipulation [17].

“Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who do the things no one can imagine.”

Did you know?The Imitation Game (2014) is based on a biography of Turing.

Hopefully, this gave you some insight into the brilliant minds behind our Parkway Parade room names! Next up, we'll be covering the faces behind our King Albert Park Mall rooms.

(Written by Cheryl Tang)

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