The Mac Observer

Skip navigational links

DealsOnTheWeb Daily Deal: Buy.com's After-Christmas Super Store - Check out the Revolving Savings

Steve Jobs Named Greatest IT Person

by , 2:15 PM EST, October 30th, 2006

Computer Weekly has issued its list of the ten greatest IT people, with Apple CEO Steve Jobs topping the chart, followed by HTML creator Tim Berners-Lee, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, Java father James Gosling, Linux creator Linus Torvalds, GNU Project founder Richard Stallman, science-fiction author Arthur C. Clarke, Ted Codd, who formulated 12 rules for relational databases, Steve Shirley, who was an early advocate for women in IT, and Martha Lane Fox, who co-created Lastminute.com.

Of Mr. Jobs, the publication wrote: "Whether Jobs' next creation changes the world like the Apple II, or turns out to bomb like the Apple Lisa, his place in computing history is guaranteed." It also noted that Mr. Berners-Lee used the NeXT interface builder to create the first Web browser and build the first Web site, http://info.cern.ch/, which is still in existence today.

Computer Weekly noted that the top four people on the list were born in 1955, the same year Albert Einstein died. Those who made the list of also-rans were: Ken Olsen, founder of Dec, who invented the minicomputer; Clive Sinclair, home computer visionary; Vint Cerf, one of the Internet's founding fathers; Bill Joy, co-founder of Sun Microsystems; Larry Ellison, founder of Oracle; Steve Wozniak, Apple co-founder; Dennis Ritchie, inventor of the C programming language; Donald Davies, co-inventor of packet switching; Ken Thompson, co-creator of Unix; and Grace Hopper, Cobol pioneer.

Digg!

Observer Comments

Show: Subjects Only | Full Comments
Close Name:BurmaYank Posts: 27 Joined: 22 Oct 2003
Subject: HTML's & www's many debts to Apple

"It also noted that Mr. Berners-Lee used the NeXT interface builder to create the first Web browser and build the first Web site, http://info.cern.ch/, which is still in existence today."

But it did not note (and should have noted) that hypertext, the basis of HTML that Berners-Lee created (on Steve Job's NeXT computer), was created by Bill Atkinson for his & Apple's Hypercard graphical DB system (after Bill had finished inventing the Apple clipboard, WYSIWYG editing/printing, MacPaint and MacWrite, etc.).

Close Name:Rainy Day Posts: 607 Joined: 07 Jun 2005
Subject: His greatest mistake

And John Sculley has said that was his greatest mistake: Not advancing HyperCard to the next level.

Comment on this Article


You cannot edit your comments.   You cannot delete your comments.
Log in | Register | Having Problems? Reset TMO Cookies & Try Again
Username:   Password:   Log me on automatically each visit   

You are not logged in, and this post will appear as "Guest." Log in with your username and password from the TMO forums. If you do not have a username, you can register here.
Please note that guests are limited to including a maximum of two URLs per post.


Post A Comment
  Subject


  Your Comments



Please enter the word exactly as you see it in the image above. Registered users aren't prompted for this. Having trouble reading the image get a new one.


Recent Headlines - Updated January 9th

Thu, 5:56 PM
Macworld Expo 2009 - Orbicule Announces Undercover 3 with Location Technology
5:49 PM
News - TOM BIHN, Waterfield Designs Release 17” Unibody MacBook Pro Notebook Cases
3:50 PM
Macworld Expo 2009 - Targus Shows File Share Cable for Mac
3:40 PM
Macworld Expo 2009 - Blackmagic Demonstrates Video Recorder
3:14 PM
News - Microvision Demonstrates SHOW WX Laser Projector
2:53 PM
Just a Thought - First Time: A Closer look at Macworld and San Francisco
12:35 PM
News - Mac Gamers Can Now Fight For Good or Evil in City of Heroes
12:12 PM
News - EVE Online to Expand the Known Universe in March
11:53 AM
News - Feral to Ship Rome: Total War Gold in March
11:19 AM
News - Freeverse Says Commander: Napoleon at War is on the March
10:34 AM
News - Whither Macworld Expo?
9:47 AM
News - Paragon Issues 30 ‘Talking’ Dictionaries

The Mac Observer Reader Specials