Background
Kahn was born in 1943 in Cape Town, South Africa and moved in 1960 to England. She said later that she did so in order to pursue her education and escape the politics of her native country.
university professor computer scientist
Kahn was born in 1943 in Cape Town, South Africa and moved in 1960 to England. She said later that she did so in order to pursue her education and escape the politics of her native country.
She attended the University of London and studied classics, after which she attended a post-graduate diploma course in computing at the Newcastle University, where she was first exposed to working with the English Electric KDF9 computer and programming in ALGOL.
Kahn participated in the development of the Manchester MU5 computer. Kahn retired from Manchester in 2006 and died in 2007. She subsequently worked as a programmer at English Electric.
Kahn joined the Computer Science Department at the University of Manchester in 1967, appointed as an assistant lecturer based on her ability to teach Common Business Oriented Language. She has been cited as an example of how women with non-traditional backgrounds could enter early academic computer science by offering unusual specialized skills.
Although Kahn never pursued a Doctor of Philosophy, she was a faculty member who supervised a number of Doctor of Philosophy students. During her tenure she started the computer-aided design (Computer-aided Design) group at Manchester, worked on the Manchester MU5 computer, and was extensively involved in standards development, most notably for the EDIF project
She collaborated with Tom Kilburn and wrote published several obituaries on him. Kahn was also active in preserving the history of early computing at Manchester and organised a large-scale celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Manchester Small-Scale Experimental Machine (given the nickname "Baby"), the first stored-program computer, which was completed in 1948.
Kahn retired from her faculty position in 2006.
Later she became involved in standards development and was both the chair of the Technical Experts Group and a member of the Steering Committee for the development of the EDIF (Electronic Design Interchange Format) standard.