Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Barry Boehm – software engineering economics, spiral development; Corrado Böhm – author of the structured program theorem; Kurt Bollacker; Jeff Bonwick – invented slab allocation and ZFS; Grady Booch – Unified Modeling Language, Object Management Group; George Boole – Boolean logic; Andrew Booth – developed the first rotating drum ...
Peter Gregson (research engineer, Vice-Chancellor of the Queen's University of Belfast) Dame Judith Hackitt (engineer and civil servant) [4] Sir Stanley Hooker (mechanical engineer) C.L.V. Jayathilake (engineer) Viktor Jensen (engineer) Frederick William Lanchester (aeronautic engineer) Meir Manny Lehman (software engineering) Tshilidzi Marwala ...
C. Timothy Canham; Bryan Cantrill; Anita Carleton; John Carmack; Robert Carr (programmer) Doris Carver; Albert F. Case Jr. Karen Casella; Naomi Ceder; Maciej Cegłowski
Software engineering is a field within computer science focused on designing, developing, testing, and maintaining of software applications.It involves applying engineering principles and computer programming expertise to develop software systems that meet user needs.
Chris Malachowsky (M.S. 1986), co-founder and Senior Vice President of Engineering and Operations, NVIDIA; Peter Oppenheimer (M.B.A. 1987), CFO and senior vice president of Apple Computer; George Reyes (M.B.A 1979), CFO, and former senior vice president, Google; Stephen Schott (1960), former owner of the Oakland Athletics
Douglas McIlroy (PhD 1959) – mathematician, software engineer, professor, developed component-based software engineering, an original developer of Unix, member of National Academy of Engineering Diane McKnight (B.S. 1975, M.S. 1978, PhD 1979) – engineering professor, limnologist, biogeochemist, Antarctic researcher
Tony Parisi, one of the early pioneers in virtual reality and the metaverse, is an entrepreneur, inventor and developer of 3D computer software. [4] [5] The co-creator of Virtual Reality Modeling Language (), he has written [6] books and papers on the future of technology.
UCF alumni have made research contributions to optics, modeling and simulation, digital media, engineering and computer science, business administration, education, and hospitality management. Among the most notable is Gene Frantz ('71), inventor of the Texas Instruments Speak and Spell, and father of digital signal processing.