Alan Kay Receives ACM Turing Award
TheAncientHacker writes "Alan Kay, the creator of the Smalltalk computer language (and a good deal of what we call Object Oriented Programming) is the winner of this year's Turing Award from the ACM. Kay is also the co-winner of this year's Charles Stark Draper Prize. For more, check out the website of Kay's latest project, Squeak - an open, highly-portable Smalltalk-80 implementation go to the Squeak homepage or the page of the SqueakLand community which uses Squeak in schools. For more on Kay's Turing Award, see this article on the SqueakLand site." Couple of other awards to announce: bth writes "The Association for Computing Machinery announced that it has recognized Dr. Stuart I. Feldman for creating a seminal piece of software engineering known as Make. Almost every software developer in the world has used Make, or one of its descendants, as a tool for maintaining computer software. Dr. Feldman will receive the 2003 ACM Software System Award." And finally, squidfrog writes "Nick Holonyak Jr., inventor of the LED, is being awarded the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize at a ceremony in Washington. Edith Flanigen, 75, was also recognized, with the $100,000 Lemelson-MIT Lifetime Achievement Award for her work on a new generation of 'molecular sieves,' porous crystals that can separate molecules by size."
Doesn't the model-view-controller pattern originally come from smalltalk?
Dogma - "let's just say we'd like to avoid any empirical entanglements."
I was impressed that a 75 year old is doing cutting-edge work but this "new generation" of sieves seems to have actually been new in the 1950's. Good for her, in any case.
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...
-P.M.
"Back in the day," an OOD class I took at Georgia Tech was taught in Squeak - which was widely held to be waning in favor even then. I don't see how it's groundbreaking now.
Not to say it's good for nothing - Squeak is particularly good at web crawling apps, IIRC.
As an added bit of trivia, I believe Squeak was so named because one of its biggest proponents is the Mouse himself.
We have a 6th grade math teacher in our school I work with who's been using Squeak to talk about various math concepts. The kids are really into it and constantly engaged. They get into making their own objects and it's a great jumping off point for me to teach them some rudimentary programming skills too.
So Alan Kay used to work in a segment of our offices devoted to Squeak development before he officially joined up with HP. I've met him a few times and I've worked very closely with one of his collegues who is actually leaving my company to join Alan again at HP.
He is an amazing guy and Squeak is a pretty cool language/environment to program in.
Its nice to see his work with Squeak finally being recognized. Word has it that he and some other people (including the guy who is leaving our company) are going to be working on some educational software in Squeak that will come with HP PCs.
Having installed Squeak on Windows, Linux, and Mac, I can say that I've never had a problem with Squeak.
There are two factors here, that I can see: Squeak, and Windows 2000. Which is the more reliable of the two? I think I know...
N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
"Object-oriented programming is an exceptionally bad idea which could only have originated in California."
Only half right. It originated in Norway by the designers of Simula-67. However, the term perhaps may have been coined in California.
Table-ized A.I.
Is Ant better than SCONS?
http://ant.apache.org/
http://www.scons.org/
Seriously, I'm just curious. I've heard a lot more about SCONS than Ant. For instance Blender is switching over to a SCONS build system.