Slashdot Mirror


Michael Stonebraker Wins Turing Award

An anonymous reader writes: Michael Stonebraker, an MIT researcher who has revolutionized the field of database management systems and founded multiple successful database companies, has won the Association for Computing Machinery's $1 million A.M. Turing Award, often referred to as "the Nobel Prize of computing." In his previous work at the University of California at Berkeley, Stonebraker developed two of his most influential systems, Ingres and Postgres (PDF), which provide the foundational ideas — and, in many cases, specific source code — that spawned several contemporary database products, including IBM's Informix and EMC's Greenplum. Ingres was one of the first relational databases, which provide a more organized way to store multiple kinds of entities – and which now serve as the industry standard for business storage. Postgres, meanwhile, integrated Ingres' ideas with object-oriented programming, enabling users to natively map objects and their attributes into databases. This new notion of "object-relational" databases could be used to represent and manipulate complex data, like computer-aided design, geospatial data, and time series.

2 of 40 comments (clear)

  1. Love seeing this by danbuter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He deserves it. Amazing how many "unknown" people are so important to modern life, since they are usually never talked about.

  2. Its about time! by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Given that he has driven DB development for several decades, it's surprising this award took this long.