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There are several developers that market themselves with an extremely high profile and as I'm a English speaker most of them seem to be from the US.

Are there active blogging/podcasting British developers?

Who are they, what do they do and where are they?

The only notable British developer I can think of is Simon Peyton-Jones.

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Rich B, please stop retagging EVERY question as not-programming-related... it's kinda annoying – Juan Manuel Feb 10 at 11:48
In Rich's defense I originally tagged it as NPR. I hope it stays open as it is of programming interest. I've CW'ed it in the hope it will stay open. – John Nolan Feb 10 at 11:52
It is not-programming-related. It really doesn't belong open, IMHO. Talk about signal-to-noise ratio going down. – George Stocker Feb 10 at 13:39
I beg to differ Gortok, obviously as its my question. Programming is a holistic practice and to concentrate solely on yes/no answers makes the world a duller place.I feel history, culture and context are important, thus asking this question. I've certainly benefited from the answers. – John Nolan Feb 10 at 14:22

closed as not programming related by Rich B, Juan Manuel, Brian Rasmussen, George Stocker Feb 10 at 13:36

17 Answers

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Tim Berners-Lee (Hint: you're using something he invented this very second)

Bell & Braben (the people behind Elite)

Sophie Wilson (architect of the Acorn/BBC system software and ARM instruction set)

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Martin Fowler

Oh, some guy called Turing wasn't half bad either.

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Didn't know he was British, he US based though so + 0.5 – John Nolan Feb 10 at 11:10
Understatement alert. – Gamecat Feb 10 at 11:12
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Though I'm not sure Turing's that active in the blogging community... – Dominic Rodger Feb 10 at 11:15
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Jon Skeet is British ;)

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Being pedantic, you can't actually be British, specifically, British is not a nationality. You can be English, Welsh or Scottish. – Skizz Feb 10 at 11:14
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If you can't be British, surely the adjective "British" wouldn't exist, no? I see what you're saying but Srikanth didn't say: "Skeet's nationality is British" – Oli Feb 10 at 11:17
I'm part English, part Welsh. What does that make me? :) – Valerion Feb 10 at 11:17
Absolute nonsense. Disregarding the fact that many people in the UK label themselves "British" deliberately not "English", and that you forgot N.I., Isles of Man + *sey, and the Olympic team, being English also makes you British, European and Western upstream and Southern, Cornish, etc downstream. – annakata Feb 10 at 11:20
Marc Gravell blogs too (marcgravell.blogspot.com), but he's probably too modest to say so :P – annakata Feb 10 at 11:25
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How about the Linux kernel developers Alan Cox and Stephen Tweedie? Or Martin Richards, the guy that designed BCPL and so gave us C, C++ etc.

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Check out the Brit Pack, there are tons of web developers and designers:

and many more...

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What about Charles Babbage, doesn't have a blog but has some publications

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Dave Thomas, co-author of the Pragmatic Programmer, the Agile Manifesto and the definitive Ruby/Rails books is British (although he lives in the US now.)

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Mark Shuttleworth

Founder of Ubuntu.

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He's South African – John Nolan Feb 10 at 11:16
Ahh he's both :) – John Nolan Feb 10 at 11:16
Living in London, with dual citizenship. – Bravax Feb 10 at 11:16
I think the fact he is "the first african in space" might show his preference: africaninspace.com :) – Mr Potato Head Feb 10 at 11:56
Well it sounds more impressive than www.eighthbritoninspace.co.uk – therefromhere Feb 10 at 12:23
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Simon Willison, he of Django and OpenID fame

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And thinking about it, the very first programmer of al - Ada Lovelace.

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what's ada's twitter? – John Nolan Feb 10 at 11:53
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Steve Streeting - the inventor of OGRE3D

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Ian Cooper and obviously Jon Skeet are pretty high profile and British.

I suspect that there are more that are British born but live in the US due to that being where most stuff happens so it's less obvious that they are British.

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There are quite a lot of good british developers but they tend to get sucked into the black hole that is the games industry at a much higher volume than elsewhere.

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It's true, there's not many developers in the UK that blog. I guess we're all far too modest.

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ACCU is British, and their website has a blog section. At the moment, the most productive blogger is Alistair McDonald. Don't know if he is British, though.

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Don Syme, F# and .NET generics. Tony Williams, COM.

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The Scots are the kings of functional programming. ML at Edinburgh, Haskell at Glasgow, etc.

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That would be "Scots". – Roger Lipscombe Feb 10 at 12:27

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