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I'm talking about the next generation of programming greats. The Alan Kays, the Donald Knuths, the Kernighans and Ritchies, the Dijkstras, the Babbages, the Turings of tomorrow. People who are making incredible contributions to the field right now. People whose work we will look back on in 50 years' time and say "this person had a great mind and we couldn't have got to where we are without them".

There's a fair amount of crystal-ball gazing required, but I thought it might be a fun and interesting question to post :-)

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I think this is a good question, but you should probably make it community wiki, otherwise, it runs the risk of getting closed. – Andy White Apr 19 at 23:55
Community wiki isn't carte blanche to ask unsuitable questions, it'll still get closed by those that think it's subjective and argumentative, for example. – paxdiablo Apr 20 at 0:04
I agree Pax, but I think this is an interesting question, even though it's not really what some would consider acceptable. I just wanted to make sure it didn't get immediately closed for not being community wiki. I guess the community will decide if it gets closed in the end. – Andy White Apr 20 at 0:21
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Community wiki is sort of a ghetto though; a place where questions can cower in the hopes that they won't be culled for being insufficiently dot-net related. – MarkusQ Apr 20 at 0:49
FWIW I tried to make it a bit more about programming – thomasrutter Apr 20 at 12:30
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closed as not programming related by Martin, le dorfier, paxdiablo, Unsliced, Brann Apr 20 at 11:24

21 Answers

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Anders Hejlsberg

Turbo Pascal, Delphi, C#, LINQ

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+1 Good pick. It's as close as we're going to get. :) – jfclavette Apr 20 at 0:23
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For the record, turbo pascal 1.0 for DOS was 33,280 bytes. Of course you wouldn't want to use it without the message overlay file, so you had to ad another 1,408 bytes. That was for the compiler and IDE both! – Mark Harrison Apr 20 at 0:43
Wow, I didn't realise he'd done C# and LINQ too. I need to read more :-) +1, good answer. – alastairs Apr 20 at 11:31
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Richard Stallman

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In my opinion, current computing minds are brilliant more for their vision than for their technical background (even if they are brilliant in that domain as well). The names that come in my mind are: Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and Linus Torvald.

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Martin Odersky, creator of scala

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When the "old masters" invented their stuff, CS was still mostly part of the electrical engineering or mathematics faculties around the world - it was just beginning to be considered a field of its own.

I expect the same thing to happen in 50 years: Maybe Peter Norvig will be the Knuth of AI.

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David Korn

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Jeff Atwood and Joel Spolsky

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or Joel Atwood? No seriously, Jeff is monitoring all downvotes on this one... upvotes will get "loyal" badge. – lubos hasko Apr 20 at 7:34
Thank goodness this became a community wiki before it could damage my rep. – Unknown Apr 20 at 8:00
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James Gosling gets my vote.

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Jon Skeet, always.

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Grady Booch, Martin Fowler, Scott Ambler, James McGovern, John Zachman, Kent Beck, Kim Cameron, James Gosling are all part of the great influencers.

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Luis von Ahn is doing some interesting work at CMU. He gave a good presentation on Human Computation at Google a few years ago, for anyone interested.

I can't believe no one has mentioned Linus Torvalds.

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"His captcha" work, (which catapulted him to fame) was by no means revolutionary though. – Unknown Apr 20 at 2:51
I think his approach of using humans to do intensive computation (e.g., recaptcha) that is difficult for modern computers is brilliantly simple but revolutionary. – Uri Apr 20 at 2:55
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[You wrote] People whose work we will look back on in 50 years' time and say "this person had a great mind and we couldn't have got to where we are without them".

[My response] Bill gates :) [Guys please don't vote this down...]

[One more] Linus torvalds

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+1, I like this answer. I'm surprised you didn't list Jobs/Wozniak as well, though. – alastairs Apr 20 at 11:33
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Cousot-Cousot, abstract interpretation's creators

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Marting Fowler, Grady Booch, Eric Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, and John Vlissids? Dessign Patterns and UML certainly were a step forwards.

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Ditto on John Carmack (sorry can't vote up). I'm also keeping an eye on John Resig, the jQuery kid!

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+1, John Resig is a clever kid. Note the one 's' too in his last name. – alex Apr 20 at 0:25
Whoops, sorry about that. – David Apr 22 at 1:00
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I'm not going to name names but I think we are beginning a fundamental shift in software development. A shift from single core to multiple core machines. Software needs to keep up or it will not scale with future hardware improvements. I think the leaders who develop the right technologies to improve writing scalable software for multi-core machines will be among those next great computing minds.

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There won't be any. It'll be, more often than not, a collection of persons. The 'easy' problems in CS have been solved by Dijkstra and friends. In fact, what are the open problems in CS right now ? P=NP ? Sure if you count AI or even Software Engineering as CS, then there's stuff left to do, but advances in core CS will get much rarer and far between, and less relevant for non-academics, just like for the other 'sciences.'

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Quite true, if you put it this way. – Eduard - Gabriel Munteanu Apr 19 at 23:57
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Bill the Lizard.

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lol... just waiting for Jon Skeet next.. – James Atkinson Apr 19 at 23:55
Yes, I'm keeping a very close eye on that guy. :) – Bill the Lizard Apr 20 at 0:40
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I'd say Simon Peyton Jones, the father of Haskell, is a good candidate.

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That's a brave call. How many people are actually using Haskell? Why do you think it won't go the way of so many other innovations (i.e., a curiosity and nothing more)? – paxdiablo Apr 20 at 3:07
Haskell may never become a mainstream language, but it's nevertheless important. It's used extensively by PL researchers, and has influenced other languages. An amusing essay on the debatable successes of Haskell is "Confessions Of A Used Programming Language Salesman", found at <research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/…;. – gustafc Apr 20 at 8:03
Can we give him some credit for c--? – Alphaneo Apr 20 at 8:49
Isn't Haskell design by committee? – kotlinski Apr 20 at 10:12
I didn't mention SPJ for Haskell, that was only meant as background. Instead, I was referring to the whole research work done around the functional programming paradigm. Which is probably the only fresh air surrounding applied CS these days (don't take it as a value judgment). – Eduard - Gabriel Munteanu Apr 20 at 10:36
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I think my own answer would be David Deutsch, one of the leading pioneers of Quantum Computers.

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Nice, left field answer. DD is going to be viewed in a similar light to Turing when quantum computing becomes a reality. – annakata Apr 20 at 10:43
Yes, great answer. Probably the only one which pertains to theoretical CS. – Eduard - Gabriel Munteanu Apr 20 at 10:50
I know his book blew my mind, in a good way. – Charlie Flowers Apr 22 at 0:44
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John Carmack, the co-founder of id Software.

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Wow, I hadn't realised how extensive id's catalogue was until I clicked that link... – alastairs Apr 19 at 23:55
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... nor had I realised how much he'd contributed to 3-d graphics. +1 for John Carmack :-) – alastairs Apr 19 at 23:56

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