When the lights go out and the entire world is thrust into the technological nether, we’ll need board games like Turing Tumble. Created programmer Paul Boswell – he’s well known for programming ...
Chemist and professor Paul Boswell couldn’t get over how little his students knew about how computers work. He started building a three-dimensional model to teach programming and realized he could ...
there is a new game where players build mechanical computers powered by marbles to solve logic puzzles and discover how computers work. creators of Turing Tumble Paul and Alyssa Boswell tell us more ...
A school year is 180 days, with no two days and no two schools exactly alike. The students differ, the teachers differ, school cultures differ. Here, our photographers find what makes our school days ...
Typically, the brain of a computer is tiny and made out of silicon, buried deep inside a much larger gadget with control mechanisms like a keyboard or a touchscreen. But it doesn't have to be that way ...
“Computers are so pervasive these days,” says Paul Boswell ’03. He should know, because the self-described, lifelong computer nerd has built a career around them. Even as a chemistry and ...
When the lights go out and the entire world is thrust into the technological nether, we'll need board games like Turing Tumble. Created programmer Paul Boswell - he's well known for programming ...