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  1. Alan Kay. Alan Curtis Kay (born May 17, 1940) is an American computer scientist. He has been elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Royal Society of Arts. He is best known for his pioneering work on object-oriented programming and windowing graphical user interface (GUI) design.

  2. Alan dianggap sebagai salah satu pionir yang mengembangkan gagasan pemrograman berorientasi objek, bersama beberapa koleganya di PARC. Penghargaan. Pada tahun 2001 Alan Kay menerima UdK 01-Award Diarsipkan 2005-05-28 di Wayback Machine. di Berlin, Jerman atas jasa pionirnya dalam pengembangan GUI.

  3. Alan Kay Season 1. Alan was born and raised in Georgia, where he spent the majority of his childhood in the forests making shelters with his beloved hatchet.

  4. en.wikiquote.org › wiki › Alan_KayAlan Kay - Wikiquote

    Dec 30, 2023 · The best way to predict the future is to invent it. Alan Kay (1971) at a 1971 meeting of PARC. Similar remarks are attributed to Peter Drucker and Dandridge M. Cole. Cf. Dennis Gabor, Inventing the Future (1963): "The future cannot be predicted, but futures can be invented." Nigel Calder reviewed Gabor's book and wrote, "we cannot predict the ...

  5. With all the intensity and brilliance for which he is known, Alan Kay envisions better techniques for teaching kids by using computers to illustrate experience in ways -– mathematically and scientifically -- that only computers can.

  6. Nov 6, 2017 · Alan Kay. Alan Curtis Kay is an American computer scientist best known for his pioneering work on object-oriented programming and windowing graphical user interface design. While at the ARPA project at the University of Utah in the late 1960s, he invented dynamic object-oriented programming. Working at Xerox PARC, his credo was, “the best way ...

  7. Alan Curtis Kay was born in 1940 in Springfield, Massachusetts. He was raised in an environment of art, literature, and science. At three, Kay could read and by the time he started school, he had already read several hundred books. Kay attended Bethany College, where he majored in biology and minored in mathematics.