The top 10 greatest geeks of all time

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  1. Posts : 1,402
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    The top 10 greatest geeks of all time


    Iain Thomson and Shaun Nichols in San Francisco Print Story

    They say that behind every great man theres a great woman, although these days it could just as well be the other way around. Skip related content
    But behind every great technology theres almost always a great geek, the men and women whose vision and invention helped create the world and its technology as we know it.

    Often unsung and underappreciated, their own personalities or lifestyles usually keep them from gaining greater public recognition.

    You won't find any smooth-talking chief executives or business masterminds who built computing empires on this list (that comes next week). These people are the geek's geeks. They are the truly magnificent eggheads that worked their magic on the most basic levels, from invention and development to silicon and command lines.

    With so many great minds to choose from, it was all but impossible to narrow this list down to ten but after considerable argument were managed it, nearly. So at the end youll find a couple of honourable mentions it was either that or a fight would have broken out.

    1: Linus Torvalds

    Shaun Nichols: It's one thing to write a complete computer program. It takes an entirely different level of geekdom to write a computer operating system. Compound that with the fact that said operating system is a re-write of the most successful network operating environment of all time, and then - as the icing on the cake - giving the code away to the rest of the world for free and you'll start to understand why Linus Torvalds earned the number one spot.

    One story jokingly tossed around is that Torvalds wrote all of the code for the Linux kernel on the back of a shovel over the course of one cold Finish winter. The reality is only slightly less amazing: the 21 year-old student wrote the first versions of his Unix clone in his spare time as a way to connect with servers at the University of Helsinki in 1991.

    Over the next seventeen years, Linux developed into one of the most popular operating systems in the world, both for enterprise server and client computing. Many people interact with Linux machines on a daily basis without even knowing it.

    Perhaps even more important, Linux provided the spark which ignited the developing open-source software movement, which has now redefined the idea of distribution and arguably helped form the basis of collaborative principles on the web which would later become social networking and hosted collaboration tools.

    Though Linux now has thousands of developers, Torvalds remains its ultimate guardian, keeping final say in the direction of the kernel's development. He remains revered in nearly every circle of the computing world, from servers to clients to IT infrastructure and management, Linus Torvalds reigns supreme in today's order of geeks.

    Iain Thomson: In many years of travelling to Finland I have come to love the place, and Torvalds exemplifies why. Its a nation of bloody minded individuals who recognise that while this is good up to a point then working together is also essential.

    Coupled with this there is a distain for the material lifestyle in that great country. Had Torvalds been raised in America he might very well be a billionaire but instead he lives modestly and takes his wealth in knowing he has changed the computing landscape for ever.

    Torvalds was always going to be in our top three but for consistent and long term brilliance we decided he had to get the top spot. We have yet to see the full effect of Torvalds invention on the computing sphere but its going to be fun watching it develop.

    2: Steve Wozniak

    Shaun Nichols: It can be argued that nobody did more to bring about the advent of home computing than Apple. While Steve Jobs was the marketing mastermind who brought the whole thing about, Woz was the engineering muscle who developed the company's first products.

    Back in the mid-70's, there really was no such thing as a home computer. While a terminal could be installed in a house, there wasn't much of a reason. Wozniak changed that by developing a machine that was easy to understand, use and most importantly, was cheap to build and buy.

    Not only did Woz design and build the first Apple computer, he also wrote the operating system for the company's machines until the early 80s by hand with pencil and paper.

    But the real geek appeal of Woz is that, despite it all, he hasn't lost touch with his roots. He still has the air of a guy who stays up all night watching Red Dwarf and hacking out code just for the hell of it. Woz enjoys Segway polo and he's even shown up in line for Apple's iPhone releases.

    Whether you're an Apple fanboy or a Mac-hater, you have to love Woz. Truly, the man is the people's geek.

    Iain Thomson: I may not be Apples biggest fan but Woz is a legend and deserves the number two spot. Hes a painfully shy man still, with only a deep love and understanding for technology. As he himself has said, if he hadnt met Steve Jobs hed probably be living alone, with a small cubicle at HP where he would craft elegant devices and code.

    He is still for many the king geek but if you look at how long he actually stayed in business his effect over the last few decades has been relatively minimal, as he has devoted himself to teaching and other projects. Nevertheless, the man is a giant in a world of technological pigmies.

    3. Sir Tim Berners-Lee

    Iain Thomson: It is not an exaggeration to say that if it wasnt for Berners-Lee you might not be reading this article.

    Berners-Lee, while at CERN, developed the basic protocols of the World Wide Web, initially just for internal use. But when the brilliance of the invention became clear he devoted his life to its growth and spread, even if he did make a few mistakes along the way (see Geek 5).

    Had he patented his invention Berners-Lee would probably have wealth equalling that of a small country. Instead he gave it away, recognising that profiting from something like this would inhibit the growth of a technology that had the potential to revolutionise human affairs.

    Some younger readers may not remember a world without the internet but those of us who do recognise the enormous changes it has wrought. The world would be a poorer place, both intellectually and financially, without it.

    Hes still active in nurturing his invention, leading the fight against internet monitoring by ISPs and a vocal supporter of net neutrality. Hes also working on the next generation of the internet, the semantic web.

    Shaun Nichols: Sometimes it can be hard to comprehend the scale to which certain technologies can influence the world. The tens of billions of dollars in commerce which stemmed from Berners-Lee's work is simply mind-blowing.

    It's also a testament to the work done by CERN and its benefits to the rest of society. Had it not been for the LHC, most people would not have the slightest clue about the organization and what it has done.

    4: Seymour Cray

    Shaun Nichols: Perhaps nobody was more influential in the advent of supercomputing than Seymour Cray. From ERA to Control Data Corporation to Cray Research, his designs became the backbone systems of laboratories like Livermore and Los Alamos. Many of his innovations became basic concepts for supercomputer design.

    Legend has it that at the age of ten, Cray used an erector set to construct a Morse decoding tool. Later in his life, Cray spent his free time redesigning the logic circuits for his computing systems.

    Iain Thomson: Cray is similar to many on this list in that he was never happy at the head of the company. The true geek never is, because theres so much to distract you from the really important stuff doing it better than anyone else.

    Although his machines were often seen as the backbone of the military/industrial complex they were more often used for good. We would be lacking many great medical treatments and materials, or even unaware of the changing climate, without his machines.

    5: Marc Andreessen

    Iain Thomson: Marc Andreessen, with Eric Bina, was responsible for the first mass market web browser, Mosiac.

    As an unassuming computer student he learned of Berners-Lees invention and decided to design a browser that would make the internet easier for people to use. This led to a brief conflict with Berners-Lee, who was peeved that Andreessen had included the ability to view pictures online, as he thought it should be for text only.

    Mosaic was developed into the Netscape Navigator browser and for years was the de facto application for accessing the internet. It so terrified Microsoft that Redmond was forced into a dirty war against it that would later see the software giant fined hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Since the crushing of Netscape Andreessen has devoted himself to a series of new start-ups, each with a good idea, and each bought up by other companies. He lives the life of the itinerant geek, but his name on a speakers list will bring admirers by the thousand.

    Shaun Nichols: Andreeson may be considered one of the more successful geeks on this list, even despite getting run out of town by The Borg.

    He more than most truly seems to embrace and appreciate his position, and he's not afraid of a good spot of publicity. Marc Andreeson is that rare mixture of computer geek ingenuity and CEO ambition. Unlike others on this list, he has not only a knack for developing great products, he also has the ability to turn them into a solid business plan for the most part.

    6: Rear Admiral Grace Hopper

    Iain Thomson: While there have been plenty of women who have made a mark in the computing field Grace Hopper is preeminent.

    In the Second World War Hopper left her comfortable student life for the US Naval Reserve and started programming, first with the Mark One computer and then with UNIVAC. She turned down a professorship and spent the next 30 years as a leading light in the IT world.

    She developed the first ever complier and pioneered the idea that programming could be done in English, not machine code. She invented the FLOW-MATIC language to prove her point, which in turn was key to the development of COBOL. She even popularised the term bug to describe a software glitch, named after the moths that would occasionally block computer relays.

    During the seventies she retired several times, always to return to duty when needed and in 1983 was named Rear Admiral by special Presidential appointment. After she left the navy she worked as a consultant for DEC until her death at 85.

    Her influence is still felt today. The Hoppers are a group of female Microsoft employees some 3,000 strong who sponsor a scholarship in her name and visitors to Arlington can rest their feet and enjoy the sun in Grace Murray Hopper Park.

    Shaun Nichols: Grace Hopper's story should be mandatory learning for every science class. With the dearth of women in IT, reaching girls at the high school or even elementary school level should be a major priority.

    Not only is Hopper remarkable for her ability to penetrate what was completely a 'good ole boys club' in computing with the US Navy, but her assertion that programming should be done in common English proved to be what was needed to make computing accessible to most companies and individuals.

    7: Jack Kilby and Robert Noyce

    Shaun Nichols: Both great minds in their own right, Kilby and Noyce are forever joined at the hip in history for their unintentional collaboration on one of the most important inventions in computing history, the integrated circuit

    Kilby invented his integrated circuit in the summer of 1958 while the rest of the staff at Texas Instruments were on summer holiday. The rookie engineer used a single block of germanium to build all of the necessary components for an electronic circuit, eliminating the need to solder thousands of components to a single board when building computing circuits.

    Some six months later Intel's Robert Noyce, unaware of Kilby's work, constructed a circuit from a single block of silicon. Noyce's methods later became the first microprocessor and enabled computing as we know it.

    Both men deservedly earned Nobel prizes for their work.

    Iain Thomson: This was a tough call. There was some discussion about replacing Kilby and Noyce with Gordon Moore but in the end Shaun won out. Moore may have been a genius engineer, but these two were the spark that set off a revolution.

    Without these two computers might still be the size of rooms, with huge oil filled cooling baffles and highly fragile mechanics. Arthur C Clarke once noted that the microprocessor significantly slowed manned space flight, since before the microprocessor many astronauts would have been needed in orbit to man a spacecrafts computer systems.

    8: Alan Turing

    Iain Thomson: It is not an exaggeration to say that Alan Turing and his team at Bletchly Park saved millions of lives in the Second World War and ultimately paved the way for the technology industry as we know it. Not bad for barely a decades work.

    As a brilliant young mathematician Turing foresaw that the time had come for mechanical computer and was key to their design and philosophy. He developed the code-breaking Bombe from its Polish original and was an important player in bringing together the team behind Collosus, arguably the worlds first programmable computer.

    He was also key in the development of the idea of artificial intelligence (AI). The Turing Test, whereby a computer must convince a remote human operator that it is also human, is still one of the standards of AI today.

    Turing may have had much more to offer the world but after being outed and then persecuted for his homosexuality he committed suicide in 1954. Had he lived the computer could have been completely different to todays machines.

    Shaun Nichols: When you consider how many thousands of great minds and millions of hours have gone into developing the technologies we have today, visionaries like Turing simply become giants.

    This wasn't your typical story of two grad students in comfortable garage somewhere in Northern California. Turing was able to construct machines that were beyond anything ever seen while under the threat of Nazi invasion.

    As Iain pointed out, it's an absolutely terrible shame that such a brilliant mind was taken from the industry so early.

    9: Richard Stallman

    Shaun Nichols: If Linus Torvalds provided the spark to set off what has become today's open source software movement, then Stallman built the fireplace, chopped the logs, arranged the kindling and doused the whole thing with lighter fluid.

    While at MIT, Stallman sought to preserve the 1970's 'hacker' culture by creating standards for free software that would later become the GNU project. Additionally, he was a heck of a programmer. Among his creations are the stellar GNU compilers and the Emacs project.

    Iain Thomson: I would have liked to see Stallman higher on the list but there was such stiff competition that he had to move down.

    Stallmans a tough old soul, a brilliant mind and a deadly enemy, but is firmly committed to his goal free software for all. Its the kind of mind that had it been applied to politics could have lead to a revolution, or more likely, a blindfold and firing squad.

    Hes a persistent thorn in the side of the commercial software industry but proof positive that such people are needed and wanted by the rest of the world.

    10: Paul Allen

    Iain Thomson: Without Paul Allen it is fair to say that Bill Gates would not have spent so long as the richest man in the world. Allen convinced Gates to drop out for Harvard to set up Microsoft and was twice the programmer Gates ever was.

    He was key to Microsofts early success, but was never as driven as Gates, once falling out with him after he skipped work for a day to go and see the first ever Space Shuttle launch. He was also key to Microsoft buying QDOS, which the company transformed into DOS, the cornerstone of its success.

    After a bout of cancer he retired and used the enormous wealth he had helped create to fund other important technology companies, notably AOL and the commercial space operation Scaled Composites, which won the X Prize.

    He now devotes much of his time to philanthropy, and although his mega yacht and personal submarine (painted yellow) are not traditional geek accoutrements its difficult to begrudge him some toys.

    Shaun Nichols: Paul Allen is Redmond's Woz. Not only did he play the classic geek role as the unsung hero whose genius drives the company through its earliest and hardest times, but like Woz, he aged well for a geek. Even in lavish wealth, you get the feeling this is a guy you sit down and discuss Monty Python with.

    As admirable as the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation is, Allen was there first. While Gates was still locked in on his quest for world software domination, Paul Allen was setting the blue print for how tech millionaires should give back to both the scientific community and society as a whole.

    Honourable Mention: Curt Herzstark

    Shaun Nichols: In 1970, the first electronic miniature calculators emerged. What many people didn't realize, however, was that a calculator you could hold in your hand had been available for more than 20 years prior.

    Curt Herzstark invented the Curta mechanical calculator prior to World War II, then perfected the design while being held prisoner in the Buchenwald concentration camp. To this day, the cylindrical crank-operated Curta calculator is an engineering masterpiece.

    Iain Thomson: Herzstarks invention literally saved his life, as without it it is unlikely he would have made it through the war and would have joined the six million Jews and five million others who fell victim to the Holocaust.

    After the liberation he then had to flee the Soviets before he could finally see his calculators made in Lichtenstein. For a phenomenally tenacious geek like Herzstark the invention of the electronic calculator must have been a hard blow indeed.

    Honourable Mention: Randall Munroe

    Iain Thomson: OK, mea culpa on this one, I fought long and hard to get Munroe into the top ten but just couldnt justify it, so we settled on the Honourable Mention.

    Randall Munroe was a NASA contractor who in 2006 came up with the idea of a web-based comic dealing with technology, philosophy, relationships and, occasionally, velociraptors. In the last few years I have met very few people in the industry who do not have a favourite of his creations, even if some require knowledge of UNIX to get the joke.

    He has spawned entire internet subcultures, including Rule 34 (if you can imagine something then theres a web page of porn for it), is a passionate supporter of women online and is one of the most popular public speakers in the technology field.

    Munroe still codes, pursues geek activities such as kite photography and geohashing, and lives simply from the sale of merchandise. I feel he will become to the IT industry what Charles Schultz was to the world.

    Shaun Nichols: I was a bit skeptical about this pick until I sat down and thought about just how well Munroe is able to skewer the industry. While what he makes didn't change the face of computing by any means, it really hits at the heart of everything in the tech world.

    Every industry needs a satirist, a clown, and a brilliant pundit. Munroe does all three amazingly well, while still keeping everything remarkable technically accurate.
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  2. Posts : 154
    Windows 7 Build 7100
       #2

    Brilliant Article echrada, I'd like to add, Woz didn't only write the early OS with a pencil and paper. It was later confirmed by Steve Jobs that Woz came to him with the design written on the back of a paper napkin!!
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  3. Posts : 8,476
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       #3

    Hi Leslie, you forgot Shawn and me.
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  4. Posts : 4,573
       #4

    Da Vinci, Archimedes, AG Bell, Edison, Euclid, Babbage, Bohm - and even this is short sighted.
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  5. Posts : 8,476
    Windows® 8 Pro (64-bit)
       #5
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  6. Posts : 242
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit RTM
       #6

    Absolutely for my vote for top well-known geek: Linus, as shown in the first slot there.

    For most under-valued lesser-known geek: Grace Hopper, as shown somewhere in there.
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  7. DJG
    Posts : 1,008
    Windows 7 RTM x64
       #7

    I can't believe they left out Lady Ada Lovelace, patron saint of computer programming, and compulsive gambler & party animal par excellence ...
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  8. Posts : 242
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit RTM
       #8

    DJG said:
    I can't believe they left out Lady Ada Lovelace, patron saint of computer programming, and compulsive gambler & party animal par excellence ...
    Well, she's more of a nerd than a geek.

    But history is clouded with her actual contribution. I have no doubt she was a numeric genius, but there is skepticism.

    Wikipedia: Ada Lovelace said:
    However, biographers debate the extent of her original contributions, with some holding that the programs were written by Babbage himself. Babbage wrote the following on the subject, in his Passages from the Life of a Philosopher (1846):[19][21]
    I then suggested that she add some notes to Menabrea's memoir, an idea which was immediately adopted. We discussed together the various illustrations that might be introduced: I suggested several but the selection was entirely her own. So also was the algebraic working out of the different problems, except, indeed, that relating to the numbers of Bernoulli, which I had offered to do to save Lady Lovelace the trouble. This she sent back to me for an amendment, having detected a grave mistake which I had made in the process.
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  9. Posts : 4,573
       #9

    ciphernemo said:
    Well, she's more of a nerd than a geek...
    A nerd would know this. A geek might not. All geeks are nerds, not all nerds are geeks. This was the grave mistake detected.
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  10. DJG
    Posts : 1,008
    Windows 7 RTM x64
       #10

    ciphernemo said:
    Well, she's more of a nerd than a geek.

    But history is clouded with her actual contribution. I have no doubt she was a numeric genius, but there is skepticism.
    I think you're just jealous . She was the software to Babbage's hardware - he never liked to acknowledge other people's contributions (not just hers). Add to that the reluctance in that era to acknowledge women other than as child-bearing machines ... but who the hell really knows?

    Either way, how many people have a programming language named after them, let alone one that's sponsored by the Department of Defense? Geeky enough for moi!
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