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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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Edsger Dijkstra. I will put together a list of recommended readings from his online archive

http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/EWD/

How can you not appreciate somebody that can write this:

"It was a type of people I did not know, I found them very strange and they did not inspire confidence at all. Later I learned that I had been introduced to electronic engineers."

EWD1316

Or who has been at this stage on a project:

"I realized that my previous projects had only been agility exercises. I now had to confront complexity itself and try to find out the best way to do difficult things. But it took me a long time to gather the courage to do that. Alan Turing committed suicide; Kurt Gödel was on and off in a mental hospital. I was terribly frightened.... I was essentially incommunicado, hardly spoke, did not work. I would sit all evening silently staring at the white walls in our living room. Finally, one night at half past two, my wife collected me weeping on the carpet in that room. From that moment I realized that something had to be done." -- Turing Award acceptance speech, 1984

~~ Mark Harrison ~~

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How can this answer be "accpeted" ? Does this mean that we all need to admire these guys? I don't get it.. – Filip Ekberg Jan 6 '09 at 3:43
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"You probably know that arrogance, in computer science, is measured in nanodijkstras." – Andrew Corkery Apr 30 at 11:29
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Mel, a real programmer

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The smartest people you've never heard of. Nothing made me a better programmer than always being around people who are are smarter than me.

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Jeffrey Richter, David Solomon

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Can I sneak Douglas Adams in here? :-)

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Scott Hanselman: That guy just did what he loves out loud. Blogged about it, podcasted about it, and now it working for the mothership.

His passion and drive is remarkable.

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Claude Shannon

He discovered that you can represent boolean logic with electricity

He is the father of all electric computers!

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i admire Jon Skeet for his over 76,000 reputation score on stack overflow.

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Peter Landin.

For his paper: your next 700 programming languages. For realizing that lambda calculus could be used to model a programming language.

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The developers of NHibernate.

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Grace Murray Hopper: I heard her speak once - very interesting and engaging. I was also pleased to receive one of her nanoseconds! (For those who don't know, she was somewhat well known for giving out little pieces of wire cut to be the length that light travels in one nanosecond - IIRC, she said it made it easier for admirals to understand what she was talking about.)

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Bill Atkinson, for HyperCard.

I cut my programming teeth on HyperCard way before I knew what programming was. I learned basically all of the fundamentals of programming in HyperCard. For a long time afterwards, I compared every other programming system I learned to HyperCard (and they always came up short!). Not to mention that HC was a primary influence on the WWW and Javascript :P

Also, Ward Cunningham for the Wiki in general, and the first Wiki in particular (the Portland Pattern Repository).

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Larry Wall. Perl. A work of art and brilliant inspiration. Nuff said.

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I can't believe no one has listed Tim Berners-Lee yet!

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Niklaus Wirth inventor/designer of several languages, including Pascal, Modula, Modula-2, and Oberon.

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Sergey Brin & Larry Page. First developer centric monster company.

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Jeff Molofee for his work with NeHe Productions ( http://nehe.gamedev.net/ ). His site had the best OpenGL tutorials for many years. He set the example with his attention to detail. His tutorials were very focused and progressed nicely from the most basic to advanced concepts.

Then he had many guest programmers later submit tutorials that he published on his site. And NeHe became the place almost every aspiring OpenGL programmer would go to get started. It's where I started my OpenGL programming and I went on to create http://www.gldomain.com/ while I was still in high school. Even though I never became a game programmer like I had wanted, the experience was invaluable and even helped me land my first programming job.

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The one and only. Jon Skeet http://stackoverflow.com/questions/305223/jon-skeet-facts

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Larry Wall - inventor of Perl.

I'm [still] a Perl hacker, but even if you don't use Perl, if you've ever heard him present or read one of his articles -- he's brilliant.

Joel Spolsky - FogCreek.com founder

Joel's amazing articles on software inspired me to keep learning and think about software as product. I became an admirer after reading his story of his time at Microsoft.

Paul Graham - YCombinator.com founder

Paul's thoughtful writing broke new ground in my intellectual, entrepreneurial, and software development.

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This is my list of authors

  1. Eldad Eilam author of Reversing - Secrets of reverse Engineering
  2. Dietel author of C++ How to program
  3. Chris Sells and Michael Weinhardt authors of Windows Forms 2.0 Programming
  4. Richard Blum author of C# Network Programming
  5. Krzysztof Cwalina and Brad Abrams authors of Framework Design Guidelines

Here's my list of general programmers

  1. ScottGu - Works on ASP.NET
  2. Phil Haacked - Works on ASP.NET
  3. Jeff Atwood found of Stack Overflow
  4. The one and only, Bill Gates
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People I know:

  • Roar Lauritzen for creating the best calculator I know about, open source MIDP I use on my phone. Also for his incredible Othello program, MIDP. And for writing a Mandelbrot set renderer for Pentium that made three pixels in paralell, two using integer pipelines, one using the floating point pipeline.
  • Kim Øyhus for his touchscreen keyboard "PentaPut", his incredible search engine, his many other advanced projects in the dewpoint between math, physics and computing.
  • Trygve Reenskaug for still being very eager about programming into his late seventies. And thus relieving me of a want for professional exit strategies.

People I don't know:

  • David Braben for Elite.
  • Jim McCarthy for his "21 rules of thumb" presentation.

People I don't even know the names of:

  • Whoever created DirectShow. It is brilliant.
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Andy Koenig of AT&T. If Stroustrup is the father of C++, Andy is it's uncle. Having met him on several occasions, I've found him one of the most friendly & outgoing people I've known. He's also knowledgeable on an extremely wide range of subject, making him the closest to a "Renaissance Man" I've met in the indstry.

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3d world

John Carmack,
Michael Abrash,
John Romero

PC world

Peter Norton,
Bill Gates,
Steve Wozniak,

Unix world

Brian Kernighan,
Dennis Ritchie,
Ken Thompson,
W. Richard Stevens,
Andrew Tanenbaum,
Linus Torvalds

Networking

Vinton Cerf, Robert Kahn (not precisely programmers.., fathers of the actual Internet)
Steven bellovin,
Robert Morris (coder of the Internet worm)

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I almost hit upvote, and then I saw "Bill Gates." Grrr... – Chris Lutz May 14 at 22:18
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In the spirit of avoiding a "ditto" in agreement with the many very qualified names above, I'd like to say Mark Russinovich.

The work he did under the banner of the SysInternals suite of tools have really, really been handy in the past and the present. Not only has he been up to his neck in Windows internals for as long as I can remember, he actively blogs and writes articles to share the knowledge.

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Bram Moolenaar, author of Vim. He had created the perfect tool for free.

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I would say James Gosling, the father of Java.

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Someone aldready said his name : John Carmack

He is the co-founder of id Software and well known for his optimizations like the magical inverse float square root implementation in quake 3 : (notice : no loop !!)

float Q_rsqrt( float number ){
    long i;
    float x2, y;
    const float threehalfs = 1.5F;

    x2 = number * 0.5F;
    y  = number;
    i  = * ( long * ) &y;  // evil floating point bit level hacking
    i  = 0x5f3759df - ( i >> 1 ); // wtf?
    y  = * ( float * ) &i;
    y  = y * ( threehalfs - ( x2 * y * y ) ); // 1st iteration
    // y  = y * ( threehalfs - ( x2 * y * y ) ); // 2nd iteration, this can be removed

    #ifndef Q3_VM
    #ifdef __linux__
      assert( !isnan(y) ); // bk010122 - FPE?
    #endif
    #endif
    return y;
}
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John Carmack didn't wrote that. The original coder is unknown. Check it out: beyond3d.com/content/articles/8 – MrValdez Oct 7 '08 at 13:23
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David Parnas. He's the guy who came up with encapsulation, a concept so core I think software engineering as we know it would be impossible. His essays are clear, cogent and well argued, and he's done great work for decades.

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Yukihiro Matsumoto (a.k.a. Matz)

Language designers want to design the perfect language. They want to be able to say, "My language is perfect. It can do everything." But it's just plain impossible to design a perfect language, because there are two ways to look at a language. One way is by looking at what can be done with that language. The other is by looking at how we feel using that language—how we feel while programming.

Because of the Turing completeness theory, everything one Turing-complete language can do can theoretically be done by another Turing-complete language, but at a different cost. You can do everything in assembler, but no one wants to program in assembler anymore. From the viewpoint of what you can do, therefore, languages do differ—but the differences are limited. For example, Python and Ruby provide almost the same power to the programmer.

Instead of emphasizing the what, I want to emphasize the how part: how we feel while programming. That's Ruby's main difference from other language designs. I emphasize the feeling, in particular, how I feel using Ruby. I didn't work hard to make Ruby perfect for everyone, because you feel differently from me. No language can be perfect for everyone. I tried to make Ruby perfect for me, but maybe it's not perfect for you. The perfect language for Guido van Rossum is probably Python.

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