Explore Alan Turing's groundbreaking 1936 conception of the universal computing machine and its revolutionary impact on modern technology. Dr Sarah Quinn examines how Turing's theoretical insights laid the foundation for all programmable computers, from smartphones to supercomputers. This episode covers Turing's solution to Hilbert's Entscheidungsproblem, his proof of computational limits, and the prescient vision that anticipated the digital age decades before electronic computers existed. Learn how Turing's abstract mathematical concepts translated into practical computer design during his postwar work at the National Physical Laboratory and Manchester University. Discover the profound implications of universal computation for theoretical computer science, artificial intelligence, and our understanding of computation as a fundamental feature of the universe. Perfect for listeners interested in computer science history, mathematical breakthroughs, and the intellectual foundations of our digital world. Features discussion of Turing machines, algorithmic thinking, and the seamless transition from Turing's wartime codebreaking experience to his revolutionary computer designs that continue to shape technology today.