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I understand that the acronym for Erlang's virtual machine, BEAM, stands for "Bogdan/Björn's Erlang Abstract Machine".

But I can't find definitive reference anywhere to exactly who Bogdan and Björn are.

Searching the erlang.org mailing list I do see posts by developers named "Bogdan Andu" and "Björn-Egil Dahlberg". Can anyone confirm, are these the engineers that BEAM is named after?

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    Interesting, but not really on-topic.
    – Andrew
    Commented May 7, 2016 at 23:17
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    AFAIK Björn = Björn Gustavsson and Bogdan = Bogumil Hausman. There's a reference indicating the latter on the erlang-questions mailing list. Both were employees at Ericsson at some time.
    – jpw
    Commented May 7, 2016 at 23:42
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    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's not about programming at all. Commented May 7, 2016 at 23:56
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    Bogumil "Bogdan" Hausman and Björn Gustavsson are correct.
    – RichardC
    Commented May 8, 2016 at 19:17
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    Favorited this question. I think it can belong here. You should know the history behind the software you use.
    – Vans S
    Commented Jun 6, 2016 at 2:50

1 Answer 1

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Erlang and OTP in Action on page 17 says that BEAM means Bogdan's Erlang Abstract Machine. Also see this errata - scroll down to page 41. Here is the history of the Erlang VM - BEAM was not the first and only VM capable of executing Erlang code! Bogdan is actually an English version of Bogumil. All those names are employees at Ericsson who worked on implementing the language and its execution environment after Joe Armstrong's initial implementation in Prolog.

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