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Dupe, and if we're really gonna run the gamut on this one again it should be community wiki. – Bob Somers Feb 24 at 10:58
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Sigh. This is exactly the kind of thing which gets the close-camp irritated and the open-camp frustrated. What's the point of this question exactly? Whom does it serve? – annakata Feb 24 at 10:58
I don't mind the question so much, but it is a dupe of 2+ questions which have gotten good answers. Would be better to simply bump one of them and add to it. – Simucal Feb 24 at 11:00
Well, at least I would have been interested. But now it's closed. – Joonas Pulakka Feb 24 at 11:01
@mad-j, if you are interested then go read the excellent responses to the two questions posted. Anything in this question would undoubtedly be a dupe of those answers anyway. – Simucal Feb 24 at 11:02
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closed as no longer relevant by annakata, arul, Mehrdad Afshari, mghie, divo Feb 24 at 10:58

7 Answers

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Babbage - he was the first who saw that a machine could solve problems, all the rest is just implementation

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von Neumann and Feynmann.

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Probably Alan Kay, known for his early pioneering work on object-oriented programming and windowing graphical user interface design.

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Of course Jon Skeet

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Prof. Andrew S. Tanenbaum. Creater of MINIX and Turtle. His books are read worldwide.

He has been a guide to many PhD. students who are known all over the world.

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Robert Floyd. As for why: Robert Floyd, in Memoriam by Donald Knuth.

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Ada Lovelace was the first programmer. Well, not necessarily the greatest.

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