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Related: About this forumWow, I never knew this about this beautiful and smart woman.....👏🏻 👏🏻 👏🏻
Hedy Lamarr, often proclaimed the most beautiful woman in the world. The 26-yr-old Lamarr was thriving in Hollywood when, in September 1940, Nazi U-boats hunted down & sank a cruise ship trying to evacuate 90 British schoolchildren to Canada. 77 drowned in the bleak north Atlantic. Lamarr, a Jewish immigrant from Nazi-occupied Austria, who had been making America her home since 1938, was outraged. She fought back by applying her engineering skills to development of a sonar sub-locator used in the Atlantic for the benefit of the Allies. The principles of her work are now incorporated into modern Wi-Fi, CDMA and Bluetooth technology, and this work led to her to be inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2014.
So awesome.
wryter2000
(47,640 posts)She was brilliant
badhair77
(4,696 posts)The Only Woman in the Room was based on Hedy Lamars story. My book club read it and we all enjoyed learning about her.
RockCreek
(779 posts)I got it from the library, when I found Marie Benedict's novels. I had never heard of her until I came across this novel. (Or at least, I didn't remember hearing about her). It is an amazing story about an amazing woman who deserves to be remembered.
badhair77
(4,696 posts)I often forget about the audio version.
CousinIT
(10,625 posts)Ada Lovelace, Grace Hopper, Williamina Fleming, Katherine Johnson, and many others: https://mashable.com/article/unsung-women-in-tech
A woman, Stephanie Kwolek, invented Kevlar, which is now used in bulletproof vests and aircraft. Where would we be without that material?
Few know of them because they were never entered into HIStory books, their contributions are ignored, or credit for their work was attributed to men or machines. Women programmed some of the machines, though.
My biggest SHEro today is Patty Wagstaff but mostly because I love watching aerobatics and airshows. https://pattywagstaff.com/
SeattleVet
(5,611 posts)I still have and treasure the 'nanoseconds' she handed out, and also a packet of 'picoseconds' from her stint as a spokesperson for Digital Equipment Corporation after she retired from the Navy at just shy of her 80th birthday (way past normal military retirement age, but she had been recalled to active duty twice, and eventually had her service indefinitely extended by special approval by Congress).
The 'nanoseconds' were a length of wire 30cm (11.8 inches) long - the distance that light travels in a vacuum in that time. She used it as a visual aid when training programmers not to waste nanoseconds of CPU time (when memory and compute time were VERY expensive). She also showed a coil of wire 300 meters (984 feet) long to illustrate a microsecond. The picoseconds? That was a packet of ground black pepper.
"It's almost always easier to get forgiven than to get permission" was one of her mantras. Words to live by!
CousinIT
(10,625 posts)What an amazing memory.
patphil
(7,200 posts)Great quote! I love it!
Beartracks
(13,631 posts)==============
a kennedy
(32,484 posts)Loved him in this movie, Blazing Saddles. 😂
COL Mustard
(7,041 posts)Talk about a movie that cant be remade!
llmart
(16,331 posts)I learned all this information from that documentary. I never knew anything about her either.
liberalla
(10,134 posts)Titled: Bombshell, the Hedy Lamarr Story
https://www.netflix.com/title/80189827
byronius
(7,649 posts)appalachiablue
(43,237 posts)3Hotdogs
(13,706 posts)BlueMTexpat
(15,511 posts)was not appreciated at the time, in part because she was a beautiful woman, but also because she was an Austrian immigrant. She developed the technology along with a composer named George Antheil.
I first heard the story, interestingly enough, during a tour of Radio City Music Hall in the Big Apple in 2015.
https://www.military.com/history/hedy-lamarrs-invention-changed-communications-heres-why-navy-rejected-it-during-wwii.html
This is a short, but worthwhile read.
Fla Dem
(25,985 posts)iluvtennis
(20,979 posts)Grumpy Old Guy
(3,637 posts)She developed a system for radios to continue switching frequencies in sync with each other so no one could listen in.
sab390
(202 posts)And my father was sonar tech in a sub during WWII. When he mustered out he spent his civilian life designing subs. Never heard this story.
jg10003
(1,030 posts)mahatmakanejeeves
(62,013 posts)From Dennis Donovan:
Sun Aug 11, 2019: 77 Years Ago Today; Hedy Lamarr & George Antheil receive patent for Frequency-hopping spread spectru
From Tuesday Afternoon:
Sat Nov 9, 2013: Happy Birthday, Hedy Lamarr!! Please Read ...
Sneederbunk
(15,482 posts)EYESORE 9001
(27,674 posts)Ive known of her brilliance for awhile now, and Im embarrassed to admit that I havent read anything extensive or detailed about her work and research. Its time to read up!
jaxexpat
(7,794 posts)came to mind already posted. I love DU, it's Headly and life is wonderful.
johnp3907
(3,922 posts)nuxvomica
(13,064 posts)I wrote a short story years ago about androids designed to look like Bogie and Bacall for a movie a billionaire wanted to make. Their personalities were programmed by hyper-analyzing all of their film footage but they made a mistake with Bacall by accidentally including some Hedy Lamarr movies. Armed with Lamarr's engineering skills, Bacall figures out a way for the couple to escape.
willamette
(182 posts)Better yet, a movie. I don't suppose you know a screenwriter ...
Bernardo de La Paz
(51,767 posts)Joinfortmill
(16,793 posts)Dark n Stormy Knight
(10,064 posts)wasn't financially secure later in life, it seems.
Actress Hedy Lamarr is suing motion picture funnyman Mel Brooks for $10 million, charging he exploited her name and identity without permission in the film Blazing Saddles.
The article continues, A western full of flagrant puns and outlandish humor on everything from race relations to homosexuality, features a heinous villain named Hedl[e]y Lamarr. Throughout the picture, the villain is addressed as Heddy and is completely at a loss to convince people his name is Hedley.
https://www.thethings.com/mel-brooks-was-sued-by-hedy-lamarr-10-million-joke-in-blazing-saddles-how-much-he-paid/
rogerballard
(3,879 posts)Helped Hedy with food and money when she fell on hard times.
lostnfound
(16,769 posts)colorado_ufo
(5,943 posts)So many wonderful contributions and contributors, forgotten and unhonored.
Hekate
(95,577 posts)This is a great thread, btw
dai13sy
(510 posts)I had no idea she was so brilliant. Amazing! I love finding out this kind of info and she used her brain for good.
elleng
(137,261 posts)raising2moredems
(722 posts)and I'm surprised the misogynists/religious nuts haven't figured out a way to claim it was really a (hetero) male who came up with the idea. I highly recommend reading about "old Hollywood" - starting in the 1910s/1920s. Fascinating history and a number of decent books re: events/actors/actresses.
cos dem
(918 posts)Absolutely critical to a lot of modern communication technology, including stuff you've never heard of. The use of player piano scrolls to set the frequency offsets on the transmitter and receiver was really clever.
I set up a development server a few years ago. Took awhile for everyone to get used to the extra 'r' in the hostname.
marble falls
(62,672 posts)... one never hears 'average looking and smart' or 'smart and average looking' or 'extremely ugly and smart', does one?
"Madam Curie, plain looking and smart ..."