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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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75 Answers

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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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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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  • Bruce Schneier : Security wouldn't be the same without him
  • Linus Torvalds : He started the whole Linux thing, I can't hate on that
  • The Google Guys, The Twitter Guys, The Ruby guy : I like these guys not only for their technological achievements but for the fact that they went out there and did it. They believed in what they were making and created something great.
  • Jimmy Wales & everyone who has committed to Wikipedia : Greatest compilation of human knowledge period. Without Wikipedia I would be far more ignorant.
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+1 for Dijkstra. He pretty much defined what we are doing here:

Don't compete with me: firstly, I have more experience, and secondly, I have chosen the weapons.
- Edsger Dijkstra

Then there is _why, the lucky stiff, basically because he brings us quality Ruby libraries and funny documentation, and because he remains a mystery.

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

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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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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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Kathy Sierra for her essays on usability aspects of software. It's a shame that the blogosphere killed the female software blogging star.

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Robert E. Tarjan, from Bell Labs. Implementing his planarity testing algorithm probably helped me discover the beauty of algorithms.

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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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I would say James Gosling, the father of Java.

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This is my list

  • Joel
  • Scott Guthrie
  • Steve Jobs
  • Bill Gates
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Myself?

I wouldn't be in the software world, if it weren't for me!

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I'm a big fan of Justin Frankel of Winamp/Gnutella/Reaper fame. His attitude and passion for software keeps pushing me to be better.

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Raymond Chen and Scott Guthre.

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Andi Gutmans, Rasmus Lerdorf, Zeev Suraski, Thies C. Arntzen, Andrei Zmievski and the rest of the PHP dream team :D

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

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

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

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

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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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Mel, a real programmer

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I would go with Rockford Lhotka who's CSLA Framework led me to David West and his book Object Thinking. This has been a foundation I draw from when looking for solutions.

Keith

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Without question, the folks that put together GitHub. Programming was fun before GitHub, but it brings a completely new social dimension to open source. That means they have to not only build a great, easy-to-use piece of software, they have to understand the social aspects of software. They do both admirably.

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This is my list;

Joel Spolsky, he definitely change my mind when I discovered his blog.

that's it

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I would have to say Jeff Atwood And Joel Spolsky :)

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  • Bill Joy - co-founder of Sun, creator of both the vi editor and BSD. Rumour has it he needed some network-related tools one day so he whipped off a few things like rsh, rcp, and rlogin in a few hours
  • Charles Petzold
  • Donald Knuth
  • Joel Spolsky - I love his blog, which eventually introduced me to the StackOverflow podcast and this site
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