Target Earth - The IET/BCS Turing Prestige Lecture 2008 - Glasgow
Date 21 February 2008
Time
18:00 - Lecture registration
18:30 - Lecture
Location
Lecture Theatre 1 (ground level), Boyd Orr Building, University Avenue, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, G12 8QQ
(please see other venues in the right hand column)
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Sponsors
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About the lecture
The problem of global warming is now widely known about. There are 12 megaproblems, like global warming, which must be urgently dealt with. All of these have potential solutions, but most of them are largely ignored. It is desirable to set targets so that we can measure the progression towards solutions. If we deal with these megaproblems in time, the 21st century could bring a magnificent future.
The speaker | Dr James Martin
Dr James Martin founded the James Martin Institute for Science and Civilization at the University of Oxford, and then the extraordinary 21st Century School at that University. He is also a Senior Fellow of the James Martin Center for Non-Proliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute in California.
Martin is a Pulitzer nominee for his book The Wired Society. He has written 103 major textbooks – more than any other living person. Many have been seminal in their field. His latest book, published in 2006, is The Meaning of the 21st Century is now being made into a major film. In addition to a D.Litt from the University of Oxford, Martin has honorary doctorates from all six continents. He is renowned as a riveting lecturer.
Martin is a social entrepreneur in the fields of education, technology and international development. He founded James Martin Associates in London, and the company quickly became global. A follow-on company, James Martin and Co., is now called Headstrong, develops ultra-complex systems for corporations, worldwide.
Martin was a member of the software Scientific Advisory Board of the U.S. Department of Defense. He was ranked 4th in Computer World’s 25th Anniversary Edition’s most influential people in computer technology.
History of the Turing lecture
The all-pervasive nature of the general-purpose computer has made the most profound mark on almost every aspect of our lives. The central seminal figure in this computer revolution was Alan Turing, whose outstanding originality and vision made it possible, in work originating in the mid 1930s. Although it is now hard to see what the limits of the computer revolution might eventually be, it was Turing himself who pointed out to us the very existence of such theoretical limitations.
In honour and recognition of Turing's contribution in the field of computing, the IET and BCS established the Turing Lecture with the first lecture being presented in 1999. It is intended to be a leading event, presenting a topic from current research in computer science given by an acknowledged expert in the field.
The content of the lecture is published in the BCS’s Computer Journal. The lecture in general is intended to attract significant audiences from the academic and industrial research/development sectors. As such, the lecture should be accessible to a somewhat wider audience than those involved in the specific field of academic research. The IET and BCS jointly handle the promotion and administration of the lecture.
James Martin’s lecture represents the 10th lecture in the series
The past Turing lectures:
| 1999 | From Computation to Interaction – Towards a Science of Information Professor Samson Abramsky |
| 2000 | Facing up to Faults Professor Brian Randell |
| 2001 | Technology Innovation and the New Economy Nick Donofrio |
| 2002 | Smaller, Faster, Better – but is it Nanotechnology Professor Mark E Welland |
| 2003 | Computing in the Age of the Genome Dr Carol Kovac |
| 2004 | Cyberworld Security – the Good the Bad and the Ugly Professor Fred Piper |
| 2005 | Collaboration and Telecollaboration in Design Professor Frederick P Brooks |
| 2006 | Lifestyle Access for the Disabled – Adding Positive Drift to the Random Walk with Technology Chris Mairs |
| 2007 | The Promise, the Limits and the Beauty of Software Grady Booch |
You are no longer able to register for this event.
Cost
The lecture is free to attend.
Organiser
For further information please contact:
Event Executive
The IET
Michael Faraday House
Six Hills Way, Stevenage
SG1 2AY
Tel: + 44 (0) 1438 765653
Fax: + 44 (0) 1438 765659
Email: pwnewell@theiet.org
