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  1. John Hughes

    John Hughes is a computer scientist who does research in the field of programming languages. He is a professor in the department of Computing Science at the Chalmers University of Technology. Hughes is a member of the Functional Programming group at Chalmers, and much of his research relates to the Haskell programming language.

  2. Rockford Lhotka

    Rockford Lhotka is an author and columnist who writes on topics concerning Microsoft-centric programming with an emphasis on object oriented design strategies. He is a Microsoft regional director, a Microsoft MVP, ASPInsider, and an INETA speaker. He also writes for MSDN Online. Lhotka is the principal technology evangelist for Magenic Technologies, a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner.

  3. James Anderson

    James Anderson is an academic staff member in the School of Systems Engineering at the University of Reading. Currently, he is teaching compilers and computer graphics and has taught mathematics, computer algebra, and programming in the past. Anderson quickly gained publicity in December 2006 when the regional BBC South Today reported his claim of "having solved a 1200 year old problem", namely that of division by zero.

  4. Matthew Smith

    Matthew Smith (born 1966) is a British computer game programmer. He is best known for his games "Manic Miner" and "Jet Set Willy" for the ZX Spectrum, released in 1983 and 1984 respectively. He was born in London, but his family moved around a great deal, finally ending up in Wallasey. He started out programming on a TRS-80. His first commercial game was a "Galaxian" clone for the TRS-80 called "Delta Tower One".

  5. Mitchel Resnick

    Mitchel Resnick is LEGO Papert Professor of Learning Research, Director of the Okawa Center, and Director of the Lifelong Kindergarten group at the MIT Media Lab. Resnick's research group has developed a variety of educational tools that engage people in new types of design activities and learning experiences, including the "programmable bricks" that were the basis for the award-winning LEGO Mindstorms and StarLogo software.

  6. Charlie Clouser

    Charles Alexander Clouser (born June 28, 1963 in Hanover, New Hampshire) is a musician whose activities include playing keyboard and drums, music programming, engineering, and mixing. He was a member of the band Nine Inch Nails from 1994-2000, and has done remixes for bands such as White Zombie, Marilyn Manson, Rammstein, Prong, Killing Joke, Type O Negative, Schwein, Collide, 12 Rounds, Foetus, Del tha Funkee Homosapien, Meat Beat Manifesto and Esthero.

  7. Chris Sawyer

    "Chris Sawyer" is a Scottish computer game developer who is best-known for designing and programming "RollerCoaster Tycoon", "RollerCoaster Tycoon 2", and "Transport Tycoon". He entered the games industry in 1983, writing games in Z80 machine code on the Memotech MTX home computer, and then the Amstrad CPC series home computer. Some of these were published by Ariolasoft, "Sepulcri Scelerati" and "Ziggurat".

  8. Robin Guthrie

    Robin Guthrie (born 4 January 1962, in Falkirk, Scotland) is a musician best known as co-founder of the Cocteau Twins. During his career Guthrie has played guitar, bass guitar, keyboards, drums and other musical instruments, in addition to programming, sampling and sound processing. Guthrie also works extensively as a producer and engineer. Following the break-up of the Cocteau Twins, Guthrie's first solo record, "Imperial", …

  9. Marcelo Tosatti

    Marcelo Wormsbecker Tosatti is a Linux kernel developer. He became the maintainer of the stable 2.4 kernel series in November 2001 when he was 18 years old, releasing 2.4.16 on November 26, and ultimately passed on maintainership for the 2.4 kernel series to Willy Tarreau on July 27 2006 following the release of 2.4.33-rc3. He was brought up in Curitiba, Brazil and worked for Conectiva for six years, during which time he became involved in kernel programming.

  10. Einar Moen

    Einar Moen (born July 4, 1977) is one of the founding members of Norwegian gothic metal band Tristania. He is in charge of synthesizer and programming and he also participates in most of Tristania's music by writing both music and lyrics.

  11. Behrouz A. Forouzan

    Behrouz A. Forouzan (born 1944) is a Professor at the Computer Information Systems department of DeAnza College. He has written many textbooks about computer science, networking, programming and databases. He graduated from the University of California, Irvine.

  12. Matthew Hennessy

    Matthew Hennessy is a British computer scientist who has contributed especially to language semantics. Hennessy is Professor of Computer Science at the Department of Informatics, University of Sussex, England. His research interests are in the area of the semantic foundations of programming and specification languages, particularly involving distributed computing, including mobile computing. He also has an interest in verification tools.

  13. Rand Miller

    Rand Miller (born January 17, 1959, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA) co-founded Cyan (now Cyan Worlds) with brother Robyn Miller and became famous from the unexpected success of their computer game "Myst", which remained the number one-selling game for the remainder of the 1990s. Rand also worked on the game's sequel, "Riven", and later "Myst III: Exile", "Myst IV: Revelation", "Myst V: End of Ages", "realMyst", and "Uru".

  14. Joe Mardin

    Joe Mardin (born Yusuf Mardin) is a music producer, arranger and engineer from New York City. He is a Berklee College of Music graduate and is the son of legendary producer Arif Mardin (Norah Jones, Aretha Franklin, Hall & Oates etc...). Joe is also a conductor, songwriter and drummer. Along with his father, Joe Mardin co-produced Queen Latifah, The Dana Owens Album, Joy A Holiday Collection, …

  15. Bruce Webster

    Bruce Webster is an internationally recognized expert on information technology, as well as a software engineer, an entrepreneur and a former game programmer. Webster is a 1978 graduate of Brigham Young University with a bachelor's degree in computer science. He also did graduate work in computer science at the University of Houston-Clear Lake in southeast Houston, Texas.

  16. Zac Baird

    Zac Baird, born February 16, 1971 in Orange County, California, is a keyboardist and pianist, currently collaborating with the band Korn. He is also noted for using the Moog synthesizer.

  17. Chris Pitman

    Chris Pitman, is a Los Angeles-based multi-instrumentalist and songwriter. In 1998, Pitman joined hard rock band Guns N' Roses as the keyboardist, along with Dizzy Reed, during concerts he also plays orchestration, synthesizers and sound effects. Prior to working with Guns N' Roses, he was a founding member of the bands Replicants, ZAUM, and the grammy nominated band in 1997 Lusk.

  18. Eric Hehner

    Eric C. R. Hehner is a Canadian computer scientist. Eric Hehner studied mathematics and physics at Carleton University, obtaining his first degree in 1969. He gained a PhD in computer science from the University of Toronto in 1974. He then joined the faculty there, becoming a full professor in 1983. He became the Bell University Chair in Software Engineering in 2001. Hehner's main research area is formal methods, particularly for programming.

  19. Charlie Wiederhold

    Charlie Wiederhold (also known as wieder) is an American video game developer known for his involvement in the first person shooter industry and community. He is currently an associate producer at Gearbox Software working on an untitled "Aliens" FPS, but has also done level design and programming. Charlie worked for Ritual Entertainment where he did level design and scripting on Sin and helped with early design on FAKK2.

  20. Paul Reiche III

    Paul Reiche III (born February 17 1961) is a computer game designer. Reiche is best known for being the co-creator, together with Fred Ford, of the "Star Control" universe. While Reiche did the game design and fiction, Ford was responsible for the programming. Reiche is listed in the credits for Toe Jam and Earl under "Invaluable Help". A childhood friend of early "Dungeons & Dragons" (D&D) artist Erol Otus, Reiche became interested in gaming as a teen.

  21. Bruno Kramm

    Bruno Kramm (born Munich, October 13 1967) is a German musician, programming (music) and playing synthesizers for the goth band Das Ich. He is also a record producer for many industrial bands, including Atrocity, Illuminate, Saviour Machine, Die Schinder, Ancient Ceremonies, Goethes Erben, Sanguis Et Cinis, In Strict Confidence, Placebo Effect, Relatives Menschsein, Printed At Bismarcks Death, Ghosting, Cyan killsE.Coli, Collide, Dorsetshire, Tilt! and Distorted Reality.

  22. Edsel Dope

    Edsel Dope (born Brian Ebejer, March 21 1974 in New York City) is the lead singer and main songwriter for Dope, an industrial metal band, originally from New York City. It was founded on December 10, 1997 by Edsel and his brother, Simon (keyboards). Edsel co-produced all of dope's albums. On "felons and revolutionaries", Dope's first album (released in 1999), Edsel played and programmed most of the musical instruments.

  23. Athanasios Tsakalidis

    Athanasios Tsakalidis is a well-known and recognisable Greek Computer Scientist, from Katerini in Northern Greece. His first studies being at Mathematics at the Aristotelian University of Thessaloniki, he was soon to discover his talents in Computer Science, and earn a second degree in informatics at the University of Saarland, (Saarbrücken, Germany). He got his Jedi Master' s Thesis: "Sorting Presorted Files" from this University, along with his PhD in Computer Science, …

  24. Tony Delroy

    Anthony Eric Delroy is an Australian radio personality and host of "NightLife" on ABC Local radio. Joining the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, he worked on-air in Bathurst and Launceston before settling at their Sydney station 702 ABC Sydney in 1987. He found his niche when he took over the late show slot from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. In 1990 it went national and the ABC replaced the state-based late-night programming with the Sydney-based show, …

  25. Jude Milhon

    Jude Milhon (March 12, 1939 - July 19, 2003), in Anderson, Indiana, best known by her pseudonym St. Jude, was a hacker and author in the San Francisco Bay Area. Milhon coined the term cypherpunk and was a founding member of the cypherpunks. Another term she is credited with coining is hippie, in 1962 in Cleveland. She began programming in 1967, writing software for the Horn and Hardart company.

  26. Jocke Skog

    Jocke Skog (born June 3 1969, in Stockholm, Sweden) is the back up vocalist and programmist in Nu Metal band Clawfinger. He formed the band in 1989 with Rosegrove Hospital co-worker Zak Tell.

  27. Ida Rhodes

    Ida Rhodes (15 may, 1900 - 1 February 1986) was a mathematician who became a member of the clique of influential women at the heart of early computer development in the United States. Rhodes (birth name Hadassah Itzkowitz) was born in 1900 in the Ukraine. She came to the United States in 1913 and was studying math at Cornell University only six years later. She received her BA in mathematics in February, 1923 and her MA in September of the same year, …

  28. Ioannis Galidakis

    Ioannis N. Galidakis (born 1964) is a Greek mathematician, programmer, lab spectroscopist and amateur baroque composer. In mathematics he has worked in the areas of complex and real analysis. In programming, he has worked both as an independent contractor and under Apple Computer in Greece localizing system software. In spectroscopy, he is known for his large data collection of spectra of elements and common light sources.

  29. Kenneth Udut

    offers Naples Online Marketing, Collier County's Electronic Village at http://free.naplesplus.us also animal trapping company, Excel guru, researcher, composer, fascinated by the interconnected nature of all things, amateur scientist.

  30. Daniel Henry Holmes Ingalls Jr.

    Daniel Henry Holmes Ingalls, Jr. is a pioneer of object-oriented computer programming and the principal architect, designer and implementor of five generations of Smalltalk environments. He designed the bytecoded virtual machine that made Smalltalk practical in 1976. He also invented Bit blit, the general-purpose graphical operation that underlies most bitmap graphics systems today, and pop-up menus.

  31. Pierre Bastoul

    Pierre Bastoul is captain @ odyssee la web agence (o10c), a small company in France that makes websites since 1997. See more on http://www.lawebagence.com

  32. Jörg Seidel

  33. João P Vieira

    João Vieira is a Portuguese author and magazine and newspaper columnist. He specializes in new technologies, and is frequently asked to consult for companies trying to prepare for the future. In 1998, at age 22, João Vieira started writing for websites about web programming. One year later he founded the first ASP programming website written in Portuguese, and he was invited to write his first book, "Programação Web Com Active Server Pages", …

  34. Bob Carilli

    Robert Carilli President/CEO Medium Click - SEO/SEM

  35. Jovel Crisostomo

    What to say? I work for The Aerospace Corporation. Where I live is yet to be determined.

  36. Thomas Devriendt

    De makkers (My Buddies):.

  37. Davide Casali

    Atypical Solipsist.

  38. Tatyana Knaifel

    Network Administration, Cisco, Routing, VoIP; Programming: C/C++, Assembler, VB, Java, PHP, ASP, SQL. Platforms: Linux, Unix, Windows.

  39. Jon Frank

    Jon is building and developing at Spock. Sweet! Mr. Frank graduated from Stanford University and leads the front-end of Spock with his unmatched ingenuity.

  40. Rajgo

    Seasoned Product Management Professional with 7+ years of "Through the Fire" experience in a fast moving & Profitable Startup.

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