- Josh Server
Josh Server (born April 11, 1979 in Highland Park, Illinois) is an American actor, best known for being the only "All That" cast member to remain through the entire original 6 seasons (which are often referred to as "The Golden Age" of "All That"). He also appeared and acted in the "All That 10th Anniversary Reunion Special" and in the films "Good Burger", based on the "All That" sketch of the same name, and "Broken Record", …
- Eric Server
Eric Server was a U.S. television character actor, best known for providing the voice of computer brain Dr. Theopolis in the 1979-81 TV series, "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century". He guest starred in the "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" episode "The Circle".
- Jarkko Oikarinen
Jarkko Oikarinen (born 16 August, 1967), known on IRC as WiZ, was the developer of the first Internet chat network, called IRC, short for Internet Relay Chat. He wrote the first server and client in August 1988, while working at the University of Oulu in Finland. It was first written to replace a program called MUT (MultiUser Talk) on a BBS called OuluBox in Finland. Jarkko Oikarinen found inspiration in a chat system known as Bitnet Relay, …
- Tim Howes
Tim Howes is the co-inventor of the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), the Internet standard for accessing directory servers. The main purpose was to handle situations that the X.500 protocol suite could not address. X.500 directories list network resources to make finding them and using them easier for network administrators and users. Unfortunately, accessing X.500 records has required a full-blown X.500 server; there was no such thing as an X.500 client.
- Quentin Stafford-Fraser
James Quentin Stafford-Fraser was instrumental in the creation of the Trojan room coffee pot: the first webcam. He wrote the XCoffee client program which allowed the state of the coffee pot to be displayed on a screen. Quentin studied Computer Science at the University of Cambridge and became the first college Computer Officer in 1989 working for Gonville and Caius College.
- Ari Lemmke
Ari Lemmke (born December 12, 1963) is the person who gave Linux its name. Linus Torvalds had planned to have it named "Freax" (a combination of 'free', 'freak', and the letter X to indicate a Unix-like system). Ari encouraged him to upload it to a network so it could be easily downloaded. Ari, however, not happy with the Freax name, gave Linus a directory called "linux" on his FTP server (ftp://ftp.funet.fi/) in September 1991.
- Drew Major
Drew Major and his partners Kyle Powell, Dale Neibaur and Mark Hurst envisioned the significance of local area networking (LAN) in 1981. By 1991, their NetWare operating system turned out to be the killer application, that was powering a $40 billion dollar marketplace for network and server hardware, PCs, consulting and other assessment packages. In 1995, BYTE magazine named Drew Major one of the 20 Most prominent People for the preceding 20 years of the computer industry.
- Johan Helsingius
Johan "Julf" Helsingius, born in Finland, started and ran the Anon.penet.fi internet remailer. Anon.penet.fi was one of the most popular Internet remailers, handling 10,000 messages a day. The server was the first of its kind to use a password-protected PO box system for sending and receiving e-mails. In the Eighties he was the system administrator for the central Finnish news node as well as one of the founding members of the Finnish UNIX User Group.
- Jiang Lijun
Jiang Lijun is a Chinese freelance writer who has been detained by the Chinese government since November 2002 for posting articles on the Internet which the government considered subversive. He is a native of Tieling in Liaoning. The articles written by Jiang included an open letter to the Sixteenth National Congress of the Communist Party of China, which called for democratic reform. Jiang was detained on November 6, 2002 and formally arrested on December 14, …
- Murugan Pal
Murugan Pal a serial entrepreneur based in Silicon Valley, Bay Area, USA. Murugan is currently an EIR with Foundation Capital. Being a social entrepreneur, he acts as a technology adviser for CK12. CK12 is a non-profit organization launched in 2006, that aims to reduce the cost of textbook materials for the K-12 market both in the US and worldwide. Previously, Murugan was the founder and CTO of SpikeSource.
- Ingo Molnár
Ingo Molnár, currently employed by Red Hat, is a Hungarian Linux kernel hacker. He is most well-known for his O(1) scheduler in the 2.6.x kernel series, the in-kernel TUX HTTP / FTP server, as well as his work to enhance thread handling. He also wrote a kernel security feature called "Exec Shield", which prevents stack-based buffer overflow exploits in the x86 architecture by disabling the execute permission for the stack.
- Dave Galanter
Dave Galanter is a science fiction author who has written various "Star Trek" novels, eBooks, and short stories. His first five "Star Trek" titles were written with co-author Greg Brodeur, the husband and collaborator of author Diane Carey, but he is now writing on his own, and has penned several solo short stories and eBooks. Galanter has a degree in Journalism from Michigan State University, …
- Server Djeparov
Server Djeparov (born 3 October 1982) is an Uzbekistani football midfielder. He is a member of the national team, and has been played 26 matches and scored 5 goals since 2002
- Jeff Goddard
- Alan Cox
Alan Cox (born 1968) is a British computer programmer heavily involved in the development of the Linux kernel since its early days (1991).
- Tony Rodham
Anthony Dean Rodham (born 1954) is the youngest brother of Senator and former First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. Rodham is the son of Hugh Ellsworth Rodham, a Chicago textile wholesaler, and Dorothy Emma Howell Rodham. He has one other sibling, older brother Hugh Edwin Rodham. He attended Iowa Wesleyan College and the University of Arkansas, although he never received a degree from either school. He then worked at various jobs in Texas, Chicago and South Florida, …
- Roy Fielding
Roy T. Fielding (born 1965) is one of the principal authors of the HTTP specification and a frequently-cited authority on computer network architecture. Fielding was born in Laguna Beach, California, U.S.A., and received a doctorate from the University of California, Irvine in 2000. "Architectural Styles and the Design of Network-based Software Architectures", Fielding's doctoral dissertation, …
- John Berchmans
Saint John Berchmans (March 13, 1599 - August 13, 1621) was a Jesuit seminarian and is a saint in the Roman Catholic Church. He is the patron saint of altar servers. St. John's Jesuit High School and Academy, in Toledo, Ohio, St. John Berchmans parish and school, in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood, and the Cathedral of St. John Berchmans in Shreveport, Louisiana are named for him.
- Nikhil Kothari
Nikhil Kothari is an architect on the Web/ASP.NET team at Microsoft, and is primarily responsible for the server controls framework, Atlas (Ajax Framework) framework, and ScriptSharp. He is the author of "Developing ASP.NET Server Controls and Components" - which is the book on writing server controls. He is also the creator of ASP.NET Web Matrix.
- Andrew Tridgell
Andrew "Tridge" Tridgell (born February 28, 1967) is an Australian computer programmer best known as the creator of and contributor to the Samba file server, and co-inventor of the rsync algorithm. He is known for his analysis of complex proprietary protocols and algorithms, to allow compatible free software implementations.
- John Aloysius Ward
The Most Reverend John Aloysius Ward (24 January 1929 - 27 March 2007) was a Roman Catholic clergyman. He became Bishop of Menevia in 1981, and Archbishop of Cardiff in 1983. The later years of his ministry were overshadowed by cases of sexual misconduct by priests under his authority, and he retired in 2001. Ward was born in Leeds, England, but considered himself a Welshman. He was raised in Wrexham, where he served as an altarboy at St. Mary's Cathedral.
- Christine Mayr-Lumetzberger
Christine Mayr-Lumetzberger (born 1956 in Linz, Austria) is a teacher and former Benedictine nun who was excommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church when she and six others were ordained as priests by an Independent Catholic Bishop in 2002, called herself a Roman Catholic priest and refused to recant. She simulated being ordained a bishop in 2003 along with Gisela Forster, …
- Bertrand Serlet
Bertrand Serlet is senior vice president of software engineering at Apple Inc. He succeeded Avie Tevanian to the position in July 2003. In this position he has been primarily responsible for the release of the 10.4 versions of Mac OS X and Mac OS X Server and the upcoming 10.5 versions. Before Apple he worked at Xerox and NeXT. He spoke at WWDC 2006 on the similarities between Mac OS X Tiger and Windows Vista, …
- Lou Montulli
Louis J. Montulli II (best known as Lou Montulli) is a programmer who is well known for his work in producing web browsers. In 1991 he wrote a text web browser called Lynx while he was at the University of Kansas. This web browser was one of the first available and is still in use today. In 1994 he became a founding engineer of Netscape Communications and programmed the networking code for the first versions of the Netscape web browser.
- Keith Packard
Keith Packard is a software developer, best known for his work on the X Window System. Packard is responsible for many X extensions and technical papers on X. He has been heavily involved in the development of X since the late 1980s, at the MIT X Consortium, XFree86 and presently with the X.Org Foundation. After being expelled from XFree86 after disagreements (which led to the formation of the successful X.Org Server fork), …
- Paul Kunz
Particle physicist and software developer Paul Kunz initiated the deployment of the first web server outside of Europe. After a meeting with Tim Berners-Lee of CERN, he returned to the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center with word of the World Wide Web. By Thursday, December 12 1991 there was an active web server in place thanks to the efforts of Paul Kunz, Louise Addis, and Terry Hung.
- Jim Jagielski
Jim Jagielski (born March 11, 1961) is a leading expert in Web and Open Source Technologies. He is best known as co-founder, member and director of The Apache Software Foundation and a core developer on several ASF projects, including the Apache HTTP Server, APR and Tomcat. His first recognition on the 'Net was as the A/UX Guru, being Editor of the FAQ and the administrator for jagubox.
- Jason Rohrer
Jason Rohrer (born 1977) is a computer programmer, writer, and musician. Some of his well known projects include *konspire2b, a pseudonymous channel-based file-distribution system *token word, a Xanadu-style text editing system *tangle, a proxy server which tries to find relationships between websites a user visits. *MUTE, a file sharing network with anonymity in mind. *Monolith, a thought experiment that might be relevant to digital copyright.
- Jouni Malinen
Jouni Malinen is the creator of a suite of open source wireless LAN software for Linux, BSD and other operating systems. The components currently include: * The hostap driver for Prism based cards, supporting both client and access point modes. * The hostapd user space daemon for access points and authentication servers. * The wpa_supplicant IEEE 802.11i/WPA2/WPA supplicant.
- Jeremie Miller
Jeremie Miller (b. 1975) is the inventor of Jabber / XMPP technologies and was the primary developer of jabberd 1.0, the first Jabber server. He also wrote one of the very first XML parsers, in JavaScript. He began working on Jabber in 1998. He began developing the software on his farm in Iowa. Later, he attended Iowa State University where he studied computer and electrical design. He broke off his studies early in 1995 to join an Internet startup company.
- Randall C. Kennedy
Randall C. Kennedy is director of research and co-founder of Competitive Systems Analysis, an Information Technology consulting company. He was also a former Senior Analyst for Giga Information Group and writes for "InfoWorld".
- Pascal de Vries
Pascal de Vries is best known as the founder of lyrics.ch, the International Lyrics Server which indexed lyrics and made it searchable for its users. In 1997 Pascal founded the site and it became a success in only 2 years. He was working as a network consultant in his home town Zurich, when he was sued by the music industry, specifically Harry Fox Agency, Warner/Chappell Music Inc., and Polygram Music Publishing Inc. for copyright infringement in 1999.
- Gottfrid Svartholm
Per Gottfrid Svartholm Warg (born 17 October 1984), alias anakata, is a Swedish computer specialist, known as the co-owner of the web hosting company PRQ and co-founder of the BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay. He has also created the software Hypercube which runs The Pirate Bay. The origin of his alias, anakata, given also the name of the software he created, is likely to be the conventional names of the two directions along the fourth dimension, …
- Bob Denny
Bob Denny (fl. late 20th century) is an American software developer who writes software for robotic telescope and remote telescope systems. He is the inventor of the Astronomy Common Object Model (ASCOM) standard, which has resulted in the easy availability of freeware device drivers for telescopes, telescope focusers, and astronomical observatory domes and enclosures. Denny is also noted for developing the first web server software for Microsoft Windows (Windows HTTPd), …
- Simon Higgs
Simon Robert Higgs (born July 24, 1964) is the founder of Higgs Communications and author of the Higgs' Laws series. After leaving school, he completed an apprenticeship in telecommunications with British Telecom but was later forced to leave BT as a result of a work-related injury. He spent several years working for non-profit missionary and relief organizations around the world during his recovery.
- Alexis Server
Open-Minded, Caring, and Extroverted.
- Curvy Chaos Server
certified RO addict!!
- Josh Server
OK, I'm not the real Josh who appeared on Nickelodeon few years ago. But hey, we could share the same name too, can we? Besides, if you think my e-mail add is kinda kiddy - it's ok, I had this add for quite some time anyway ...
- Jessica Server
I'm small. I have freckles.
- Randall E. Server