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Difference between revisions of "Laura A. Nickel"

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[[Image:Ariel Glenn December 2008.jpg|thumb|200px|Ariel Glenn (Laura Nickel) in 2008]]
 
[[Image:Ariel Glenn December 2008.jpg|thumb|200px|Ariel Glenn (Laura Nickel) in 2008]]
Ariel T. Glenn (Laura A. '''Nickel''') with [[Landon Curt Noll]] discovered on October 30, 1978 that 2<sup>21701</sup>-1 was the [[M25|25th Mersenne prime]]. This made international news because Noll and Nickel were still high school students. For the verification of this number alone, the pair used almost eight hours of time running an assembly language [[program]] on a CDC Cyber 174 [[mainframe]] at [[CSUH|California State University, Hayward]]. When totalled up, the efforts  consumed over 4000 hours of [[computer]] time in the search, [[double check|double testing]] M(21001) through M(24481), along with a test of M(65537) using a custom implementation of the [[Lucas-Lehmer test]].
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Ariel T. Glenn (Laura A. '''Nickel''') with [[Landon Curt Noll]] discovered on 1978-10-30 that 2<sup>21701</sup>-1 was the [[M25|25th Mersenne prime]]. This made international news because Noll and Nickel were still high school students. For the verification of this number alone, the pair used almost eight hours of time running an assembly language [[program]] on a CDC Cyber 174 [[Classes_of_computers#Mainframe computers|mainframe]] at [[CSUH|California State University, Hayward]]. When totalled up, the efforts  consumed over 4000 hours of [[computer]] time in the search, [[double check|double testing]] M(21001) through M(24481), along with a test of M(65537) using a custom implementation of the [[Lucas-Lehmer test]].
  
 
Ariel worked as a public key infrastructure specialist at Columbia University in New York in the mid 1990's, and later was a member of the Midnight Special Law Collective, a radical law collective.
 
Ariel worked as a public key infrastructure specialist at Columbia University in New York in the mid 1990's, and later was a member of the Midnight Special Law Collective, a radical law collective.
  
 
As of early 2011 she was back living in the San Francisco Bay area and is a Software Developer for the Wikimedia Foundation, and also provides office IT support.
 
As of early 2011 she was back living in the San Francisco Bay area and is a Software Developer for the Wikimedia Foundation, and also provides office IT support.
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==Sources==
 
==Sources==
 
*Entry at the [http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/User:ArielGlenn Wikimedia Foundation]
 
*Entry at the [http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/User:ArielGlenn Wikimedia Foundation]
 
*E-mail from Nickel/Glenn
 
*E-mail from Nickel/Glenn
 
[[Category:Persons|Nickel, Laura A.]]
 
[[Category:Persons|Nickel, Laura A.]]

Revision as of 15:32, 21 January 2019

File:Ariel Glenn December 2008.jpg
Ariel Glenn (Laura Nickel) in 2008

Ariel T. Glenn (Laura A. Nickel) with Landon Curt Noll discovered on 1978-10-30 that 221701-1 was the 25th Mersenne prime. This made international news because Noll and Nickel were still high school students. For the verification of this number alone, the pair used almost eight hours of time running an assembly language program on a CDC Cyber 174 mainframe at California State University, Hayward. When totalled up, the efforts consumed over 4000 hours of computer time in the search, double testing M(21001) through M(24481), along with a test of M(65537) using a custom implementation of the Lucas-Lehmer test.

Ariel worked as a public key infrastructure specialist at Columbia University in New York in the mid 1990's, and later was a member of the Midnight Special Law Collective, a radical law collective.

As of early 2011 she was back living in the San Francisco Bay area and is a Software Developer for the Wikimedia Foundation, and also provides office IT support.

Sources