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Influential in establishing computer science as an independent discipline of science; coined the term software engineering. Contributed to numerical analysis, fundamentals of interpretation and translation of programming languages, systematics of program development, program transformation, and cryptology. 1953 Bellman, Richard E.
Robert J. Lano, systems engineer at TRW corporation; originator of the N 2 chart [4] Donald J. Leonard (born 1933), American engineer, AT&T executive, received the 1996 IEEE Simon Ramo Medal; Donald H. Liles (born c. 1948), American systems engineer; Emeritus Professor at the University of Texas at Arlington
Angie Jones – software engineer and automation architect. Holds 26 patented inventions in the United States of America and Japan; Cliff Jones – Vienna Development Method (VDM) Michael I. Jordan; Mathai Joseph; Aravind K. Joshi; Bill Joy (born 1954) – Sun Microsystems, BSD UNIX, vi, csh; Dan Jurafsky – natural language processing
This is a list of programmers notable for their contributions to software, either as original author or architect, or for later additions. All entries must already have associated articles. All entries must already have associated articles.
Over the last 10–15 years Michael A. Jackson has written extensively about the nature of software engineering, has identified the main source of its difficulties as lack of specialization, and has suggested that his problem frames provide the basis for a "normal practice" of software engineering, a prerequisite if software engineering is to ...
In 1988, the AIASA changed its name to the Technology Student Association as part of a shift in focus from industrial arts to mainstream technology. This action followed a similar name change by the Texas state delegation the previous year. In 1989, the official logo, submitted by a chapter advisor, was adopted.
Hubert Zimmerman (1941–2012) was a French software engineer who pioneered internetworking with Louis Pouzin. [128] He contributed to early discussions on the Transmission Control Program, [ 123 ] [ 41 ] and was acknowledged by Cerf and Kahn in their seminal 1974 paper on internetworking .
Cunningham was born in Michigan City, Indiana, on May 26, 1949. [6] He grew up in Highland, Indiana, where he completed high school. [7]Cunningham received his bachelor's degree in interdisciplinary engineering (electrical engineering and computer science) and his master's degree in computer science from Purdue University, graduating in 1978. [8]