Staff in the Department
Emeritus Professors
Professor TONY BROOKER
Tony Brooker graduated in Mathematics from Imperial
College in 1945. It was here in 1947 that he first became involved with
computers by building from electro-mechanical relays a multiplier unit which
served as the arithmetical basis of the Imperial College Computing Engine based
on the same technology. In 1949 he moved to the Computing Laboratory at
Cambridge to work first on the differential analyser and subsequently on
software development for the EDSAC under the influence of pioneers such as David
Wheeler and Stan Gill. In 1951 he moved to Manchester to relieve Turing of
the day to day running of the Manchester Mark 1. Here, he established the
Mark 1 as a viable system for a whole range of users from different disciplines.
More importantly he started his work on high level languages with Mark 1
Autocode, a boon to many early users. This was followed by Mercury
Autocode, a contemporary of the first Fortran and finally Atlas Autocode and a
compiler-compiler.
In 1967 he moved to Essex University as founding Professor
of the Computing Centre where, with the late Professor Keith Bowden, he
initiated (just two years after Manchester) one of the first undergraduate
schemes in Computer Science that encompassed both software and hardware.
Although not a personal contributor, he created the environment for research and
teaching in artificial intelligence at Essex, now realised in hardware by a
Robotics Laboratory, opened by Professor Mike Brady in 1995. After serving
many years as faculty Dean and as a Pro-Vice-Chancellor, he retired in 1988.
Subsequently he has published a book on a data based programming language.
There is also a laboratory named after Tony in the
Networks Centre building.