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IBM Fellow Donna Dillenberger. The IBM Fellows program was founded in 1962 by Thomas Watson Jr., as a way to promote creativity among the company's "most exceptional" technical professionals and is granted in recognition of outstanding and sustained technical achievements and leadership in engineering, programming, services, science, design and technology. [1]
As Director of Research at IBM he encouraged basic research and the building up of a patent portfolio. He also established the IBM Fellow program, which allowed top researchers to pursue their own interests for a period of time. He was promoted to vice president and group executive, and Chief Scientist and served IBM as a member of the board of ...
John Maxwell Cohn (born February 9, 1959) is an American engineer. Cohn is best known as the engineer scientist in the Discovery Channel TV show, The Colony. [2] He is an IBM Fellow at the MIT-IBM Watson AI Laboratory.
Kerrie Holley became IBM's first African American Distinguished Engineer in 2000. [8] Kerrie was appointed IBM Fellow in 2006. [9] Kerrie was a member of the Naval Studies Board and contributed to several reports. [10] Kerrie joined Cisco in 2016 as their Software Platform Group's VP and Chief Technology Officer. [11]
[4] [5] [6] Allen was the first woman to become an IBM Fellow, and in 2006 became the first woman to win the Turing Award. [7] Her achievements include seminal work in compilers, program optimization, and parallelization. [8] She worked for IBM from 1957 to 2002 and subsequently was a Fellow Emerita. [9]
Edward B. Eichelberger (born February 8, 1934, in Norfolk, VA) is an American engineer and wrestler. He holds the distinctions of IBM Fellow and IEEE Fellow (1986) for contributions to VLSI chip design, integrated circuit design, and electronic design automation. [1]
In 1962, he returned to IBM France in La Gaude as manager of an advanced development group. He was manager of line switching product development in 1964, manager of technology from 1965 to 1973 and manager of the Education and Technical Vitality Program from 1973 to 1975 when he was named IBM Fellow .
He holds three of nine PC patents for being the co-creator of the IBM personal computer released in 1981. [3] In 1995, Dean was named the first ever African-American IBM Fellow. [4] Dean was elected as a member into the National Academy of Engineering in 2000 for innovative and pioneering contributions to personal computer development.