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In an effort to spark some discussion and to find interesting people that I didn't know about, is there anybody around the software industry that you really admire? Perhaps admire is the wrong choice of word, but I'm sure there is somebody out there that has impacted you in a minor way.

What did you learn from this individual that defines what you try to achieve today?

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In general, people with one foot in programming and one foot very publicly in the world of ideas for the public good:

Doug Engelbart (and thus Bill English, for stretching technology through ideas beyond the vocabulary of the time)

Everybody associated with the Near Future Laboratory (for their relentless combination of user experience, urbanism, tech device development, and culture theory)

John Langford (machine learning, for a commitment to both theory and performance, and for constant attention to the machine learning community itself)

Paul Graham (for the commitment to speedy and wanton development, and sticking to what he knows is good even through lean times)

Lee Felsenstein (for the dedication to public computing)

Adam Greenfield (for a commitment to the convivial experience of public life)

Jimmy Wales

Dan Bricklin (for both the spreadsheet and his work on social infrastructural computing)

Clay Shirky (for carefully thinking through the social problems of archiving)

Robert Lefkowitz (for connecting his work to deeper history, in particular the history of literacy)

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I'm surprised no one has even mentioned Steve McConnell. I'm not sure how good of a developer he is, but his books are amazing - he knows his stuff, and presents it well.

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This is my list

  • Joel
  • Scott Guthrie
  • Steve Jobs
  • Bill Gates
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I love Paul Graham's essays

Donald Knuth, Alan Cox, Linus Torvalds, Richard Stallman (whatever your opinion on RMS, he's quite a character!)

There are a few more, but I'm awful with names. I also admire Jeff and Joel, obviously.

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Donald Knuth, John Carmack, those sort. I just go for the brilliant ones, and hope talent rubs off. :D
I know Linus Torvalds rubs a lot of people the wrong way, but I admire the guy's organizational and evangelical (in terms of the early 'selling' of Linux) skills. And Miguel de Icaza, cause the guy seems to get stuff done, and done right. Which I admire.

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All of the above I suppose, but also the early pioneers.

As well as the obvious ones: Alan Turing, Charles Babbage, etc I always add Tommy Flowers - an obscure telephone switch engineer who actually made the early code-cracking computers work.

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People may down-vote me for this but I was put onto Carl Franklin's and Richard Campbell's .NET Rocks when I was starting out, and I've learnt much from the various topics they cover.

I probably admire their passion for making cool stuff with .Net the most, but also the interest in making my life easier by showcasing powerful tools and tech.

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I'm wandering why anybody hasn't mentioned Donald Ervin Knuth yet. Yes, I understand he might not be the first violin in IT nowadays, though I think he's the greatest computer scientist ever. He might be considered as the introducer of analysis of algorithms, he's the author of TeX typesetting (can you imagine describing something we consider "beautiful" in programming language?) and of course TAOCP - in my opinion, a programmer's Bible.

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hmmm... not sure if there is anyone who I admire most.

My first blogs were Jeff and Joel, and they were the most influential so far. I do not have a formal education as a developer, so when I started doing development, Joel's postings were my first steps into "real" corporate development. Reading about stuff like Project Planning, how to sell stuff etc. was like opening the door into a whole new world.

In the past years I learned to see the posts with more critique - I recognize that Joel is the Business guy who of course wants to sell stuff - which is not meant negatively. Once you start questioning the people it seems that I realized what the posts are actually about, how they apply in certain situations etc.

Nowadays, I also like to follow Scott Hanselman and Raymond Chen. Scott because he is a .net Developer with a great Podcast. Raymond because he gives a lot of insight into the thinking process. I am not a C or Win32-API developer, so most of the code in his posts are useless to me, but the whole background behind it give new insights to make my own conclusions.

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Don't forget Bill Joy

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I wish to name somebody from the new age: Paul Buchheit - creator and lead developer of Gmail - and he has a blog. I admire his approach to design.

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Anders Hejlsberg.

With C# I think he's shown an outstanding combination of knowledge, skill, pragmatism and leadership.

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4  
That's the most blatant flamebait I've seen on here. Well done. – IainMH Jul 31 at 12:45
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Gotta be the Gu (Scott Guthrie) - his blog posts are epic, also highly respect Anders (Hejlsberg), especially as I have a Delphi background.

Otherwise, I have worked with a lot of really good guys over the years, and some not so good ones, that make you respect the good ones that much more!

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I have to admit, I am very much thinking of seconding Lars.

Jeff has had a real beating lately on other blogs by people that claim the quality of his blog has deteriorated (I disagree). I also find it fantastic that while they have been saying this, Jeff (and his team) have produced a site that has to be the next best thing to sliced bread for the programming community. I am really pleased with this site and where it is heading.

Hell, when it comes to monetising it. I can truly say I would gladly pay for "premium" (or whatever) membership if they decide to go with that model. There are not many sites that get that from me.

There are other greats, such as Linus Torvalds, but I just find him an arrogant geek, which I think the software industry can do without. We need more guys working together, wanting to improve their craft and be themselves and have fun with the code. This is not only how I feel, but I personally think Jeff promotes this a great deal as well.

+1 to Lars :)

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I was greatly influenced by all the old-school Bell Labs guys:

  • Dennis Ritchie
  • Ken Thompson
  • Brian Kernighan
  • P.J. Plaugher
  • Rob Pike
  • Jon Bentley

From these guys I learned economical programming on modest hardware, the importance of being able to write well and explain your ideas, and taking care to craft your programs beautifully. In addition to being awesome programmers, their collective books will stand the ages and instruct generations of programmers.

One in particular is less known than he ought to be:

  • Doug McIllroy

Who invented the concept of pipes, and who many of the above say is the smartest guy in the room. Here are some Doug McIllroy facts:

  • Doug McIlroy can handle SIGKILL.
  • Doug McIlroy can hard-link across devices.
  • In 1984, the Department of Justice broke up AT&T because they had a monopoly. On Doug McIlroy.

http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~sinclair/doug

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  • Charles Petzold
  • Don Box
  • Dan Appleman(Win32APi Guy)
  • Thorvold/Gates/Ballmer/Jobs
  • Joel - since he took the time right about it
  • Geoff - since he put is neck on the line
  • The creators of Alice
  • My Teams
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<3 Jeff <3

I really admire the fact that a person can be both a very competent software developer, and still write interesting posts about the subject without drowning it in jargon.
There are a lot of bloggers that write very good posts about the tech, but codinghorror.com has been on the top of my reading list for a while because of Jeff's way of balancing the tech and the people talk.

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