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  1. computerhistory.org › profile › alan-kayAlan Kay - CHM

    Jun 14, 2024 · Alan Kay is a computer scientist who invented object-oriented programming, graphical user interfaces, and the Dynabook concept. He worked at ARPA, Xerox PARC, and founded Viewpoints Research Institute to advance software creation and education.

  2. Jun 4, 2024 · This bold statement, made by Alan Kay in 1982, underscores a crucial principle in computer science: the deep integration of hardware and software. Kay, a visionary and pioneer in the field,...

  3. Jun 12, 2024 · Alan Kay's evening talk is entitled Learners, Powerful ideas, and the $100 Laptop. He says that he's never found the right order for the ideas in the title. Computer companies in the 1960s thought Moore's law meant that they'd get higher margins.

  4. 5 days ago · Doing a complete 180 degrees, the first-ever winner, Alan Kay, was a protagonist audiences could root for. During his documentation, he delivered heartfelt, thought-provoking inner monologues ...

  5. Jun 4, 2024 · The Turing Award is named for Alan Mathison Turing, an English pioneer in computers and artificial intelligence. The first recipient of the award, in 1966, was Alan J. Perlis, an American computer scientist who wrote the compiler for the ALGOL computer programming language.

  6. computerhistory.org › profile › dan-ingallsDan Ingalls - CHM

    3 days ago · Dan Ingalls is a computer scientist who has made pioneering innovations in object-oriented programming and computer graphics. At Xerox PARC, he codeveloped the Smalltalk programming environment with Adele Goldberg and Alan Kay.

  7. Jun 20, 2024 · Alan Kay conceptualized the laptop, which he named the Dynabook. While employed at Xerox PARC, he collaborated on the development of a prototype for this device, which was later named the Xerox Note Taker. It was also known as a slate computer or tablet PC because of its flat shape.