Johann Siegmund Popowitsch

Johann Siegmund Valentin Popowitsch (Slovene: Janez Žiga Valentin Popovič;[1] February 9, 1705 – November 21, 1774) was a Styrian philologist and natural scientist. His advocacy of a standardized Upper German paved the way for Austrian German as a variety of Standard German.[2]

Johann Siegmund Valentin Popowitsch
Born(1705-02-09)February 9, 1705
DiedNovember 21, 1774(1774-11-21) (aged 69)
NationalityStyrian
Other namesJanez Žiga Valentin Popovič
OccupationPhilologist

Popowitsch was born in Arclin, a village near Celje in Lower Styria.[1][2] He studied in Graz from 1715 to 1728, graduating from the Jesuit high school and lyceum. He continued his education by studying theology, but was not ordained. Popowitsch was familiar with 15 languages and his research interests included philology, botany, pomology, entomology, geophysics, oceanography, archaeology, history, and numismatics. He also traveled extensively in German and Italian lands. He was a professor of German at the University of Vienna from 1753 to 1766.[1][2] He died in Perchtoldsdorf. Popowitsch was characterized by Jernej Kopitar as the "greatest scholar of his time in Austria, a praiseworthy philologist and natural scientist."[3]

Works

gollark: Practically speaking you probably want tasks like "text editor" and "messaging program".
gollark: FPGAs are unsuited for the sort of general purpose responding-to-events-and-doing-some-wide-range-of-things tasks which practical computer things involve.
gollark: CPUs are mostly fine. Maybe with FPGAs onboard for accelerating some tasks, like how we use GPUs.
gollark: Not everything can be redone in the RAM-limited combinatorial-logicky way.
gollark: For the tasks computers do, which would probably be nontrivial to rework with the very different capabilities of FPGAs, CPUs on dedicated silicon can't be beaten *by* FPGAs.

References

  1. "Popovič, Janez Sigismund Valentin". Slovenska biografija. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
  2. Stammerjohann, Harro (2009). Lexicon grammaticorum. A Bio-Bibliographical Companion to the History of Linguistics. Volume 2 L-Z :. Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag. p. 1193.
  3. Sitar, Sandi (1987). Sto slovenskih znanstvenikov, zdravnikov in tehnikov. Ljubljana: Prešernova družba. p. 27.
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