Crossword-Solution: TURING
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| TURING | anagram | TRUING, UNGIRT |
We have 8 clues for the answer “TURING”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Alan ', mathematician | 1 answer |
| Author of the influential 1950 paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" | 1 answer |
| Cryptographer Alan | 1 answer |
| Cumberbatch, in "The Imitation Game" | 1 answer |
| Digital machine inventor | 1 answer |
| Mathematician who lent his name to a test | 1 answer |
| Scientist whose name is part of the acronym CAPTCHA | 1 answer |
| *"The Imitation Game" subject | 2 answers |
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Kind of apple
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E
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A
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
EETRA
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
9 +1
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Sentences with TURING (5)
Ken Thompson's 1983 Turing Award lecture to the ACM revealed the existence of a back door in early UNIX versions that may have qualified as the most fiendishly clever security hack of all time.
Service robots are less common on MUDs; but some others, such as the `Julia' robot active in 1990-91, have been remarkably impressive Turing-test experiments, able to pass as human for as long as ten or fifteen minutes of conversation.
Several moderately well-known formalisms for conceptual tasks such as programming Turing machines also qualify as toy languages in a less negative sense.
Alan Turing helped lay the foundations of computer science by showing that all machines and languages capable of expressing a certain very primitive set of operations are logically equivalent in the kinds of computations they can carry out, and in principle have capabilities that differ only in speed from those of the most powerful and elegantly-designed computers.
However, no machine or language exactly matching Turing's primitive set has ever been built (other than possibly as a classroom exercise), because it would be horribly slow and far too painful to use.
Quotes with TURING (3)
So this is where all the vapid talk about the 'soul' of the universe is actually headed. Once the hard-won principles of reason and science have been discredited, the world will not pass into the hands of credulous herbivores who keep crystals by their sides and swoon over the poems of Khalil Gibran. The 'vacuum' will be invaded instead by determined fundamentalists of every stripe who already know the truth by means of revelation and who actually seek real and serious power …
here’s a toast to Alan Turingborn in harsher, darker timeswho thought outside the containerand loved outside the linesand so the code-breaker was brokenand we’re sorryyes now the s-word has been spokenthe official conscience woken — very carefully scripted but at least it’s not encrypted — and the story does suggesta part 2 to the Turing Test:1. can machines behave like humans?2. can we?
At the laboratory, Turing designed the first relatively complete electronic stored-program digital computer for code breaking in 1945. Darwin deemed it too ambitious, however, and after several years Turing left in disgust. When the laboratory finally built his design in 1950, it was the fastest computer in the world and, astonishingly, had the memory capacity of an early Macintosh built three decades later.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: Newsday, NYT, WP.
Used 5 times in crossword archives (2001–2023).