«Lovelace, Earl of». Cracroft's Peerage. 2005. Arkivert fra originalenBruk av |arkiv_url= krever at |arkivdato= også er angitt (hjelp). Besøkt 8. mars 2016.«Arkivert kopi». Arkivert fra originalen 10. september 2017. Besøkt 8. mars 2016.
doi.org
dx.doi.org
Toole, Betty Alexandra (1987), «Poetical Science», The Byron Journal15: 55–65, DOI:10.3828/bj.1987.6.
Ada's Legacy: Cultures of Computing from the Victorian to the Digital Age, Morgan & Claypool, 2015, DOI:10.1145/2809523
J. Fuegi and J. Francis, «Lovelace & Babbage and the creation of the 1843 'notes'.» Annals of the History of Computing 25 #4 (October–December 2003): 16-26. doi:10.1109/MAHC.2003.1253887
geneastar.org
GeneaStar, GeneaStar person-ID byron[Hentet fra Wikidata]
Oppy, Graham (2021). «The Turing Test». I Zalta, Edward N. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. Besøkt 22. oktober 2022. «One of the most popular objections to the claim that there can be thinking machines is suggested by a remark made by Lady Lovelace in her memoir on Babbage’s Analytical Engine: The Analytical Engine has no pretensions to originate anything. It can do whatever we know how to order it to perform (cited by Hartree, p. 70) The key idea is that machines can only do what we know how to order them to do (or that machines can never do anything really new, or anything that would take us by surprise).»
«Lovelace, Earl of». Cracroft's Peerage. 2005. Arkivert fra originalenBruk av |arkiv_url= krever at |arkivdato= også er angitt (hjelp). Besøkt 8. mars 2016.«Arkivert kopi». Arkivert fra originalen 10. september 2017. Besøkt 8. mars 2016.
wikidata-externalid-url.toolforge.org
Roglo, Roglo person ID p=ada;n=byron, oppført som Ada Byron[Hentet fra Wikidata]
The Peerage person ID p2744.htm#i27434, besøkt 7. august 2020[Hentet fra Wikidata]