Episodes
Published 04/10/15
Today's digital world is a reverse tower of Babel. It takes all sorts of different languages to build it. It is this phenomenon that Aleks Krotoski explores in this final edition.
Published 04/10/15
Aleks Krotoski introduces the programming language that people probably interact with on a daily basis more than any other.
Published 04/09/15
Basic is the little language that could. As language of choice for home computing in the 1980s, it became iconic.
Published 04/08/15
Inefficient, verbose and ugly, yet by the 1990s, 80 per cent of the world's business software was written in Cobol. Aleks Krotoski explores why.
Published 04/07/15
The history of computing is dominated by the hardware; the race for speed and power has overshadowed how we've devised ways to instruct these machines to do useful tasks. In this 5 part series Aleks Krotoski tells the story of the languages we've used to talk to the machines. FORTRAN is the oldest of what are called high level languages and marked a revolution in computing. With its invention programmers no longer had to work at the level of the machine in ones and zeroes but could talk in...
Published 04/06/15