A. Nico Habermann Award
The A. Nico Habermann Award is offered by the Computing Research Association to individuals in recognition of contributions aimed at increasing the involvement of underrepresented communities in computing research. It is named in honour of the Dutch computer scientist A. Nico Habermann.[1]
Recipients
- 2020: Carla Ellis
- 2019: Maria Gini
- 2018: Juan Gilbert, Manuel Pérez Quiñones
- 2017: Carol Frieze
- 2016: Ayanna Howard
- 2015: Ann Quiroz Gates
- 2014: Nancy Amato
- 2013: David Notkin
- 2012: Lucy Sanders, Robert Schnabel, Telle Whitney
- 2011: Charles Lickel
- 2010: Anne Condon
- 2008: Richard E. Ladner
- 2007: Janice E. Cuny
- 2006: Mary Lou Soffa
- 2005: Jane Margolis
- 2004: Maria Klawe, Nancy Leveson
- 2003: Rita Rodriguez
- 2002: Valerie Taylor
- 2001: Anita Borg
- 2000: Roscoe Giles
- 1999: Sheila Humphreys
- 1998: Bryant York
- 1997: Andrew Bernat
- 1996: Caroline Wardle
- 1995: Eugene Lawler
- 1994: Richard A. Tapia
gollark: One day quantum computers might even be able to do useful things faster than my phone!
gollark: Still, it's a thing. Definitely a thing.
gollark: We've reached a point where quantum computers can do *some stuff* faster than classical ones, in that while it would be theoretically possible to emulate... Sycamore, or whatever it was, the one Google or someone had for "quantum supremacy" or something... on a supercomputer, it would take several days to do what it did in two minutes.
gollark: Something like that?
gollark: We do have real quantum computers, just not very practical ones.
References
- "A. Nico Habermann Award". Computing Research Association. Retrieved 2020-01-21.
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