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Computing pioneer John Backus dies

Slimy   on 21 March 2007 - 15:42 · 7 comments & 3222 views

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John Warner Backus, born in Wilmington, Delaware, in 1924, has just passed away. At 82, Backus died Saturday in Ashland, Oregon, according to IBM Corporation, where he spent his career. In 1954 he got his bosses to let him assemble a team that could design an easier system for programming. The result, Fortran, short for Formula Translation, reduced the number of programming statements necessary to operate a machine by a factor of 20. The Fortran programming language changed how people interacted with computers in the 1950s and paved the way for modern software.

The breakthrough earned Backus the 1977 Turing Award from the Association for Computing Machinery, one of the industry's highest accolades. Backus also won a National Medal of Science in 1975 and got the 1993 Charles Stark Draper Prize, the top honor from the National Academy of Engineering. Backus remained with IBM until his retirement in 1991. Among his other important contributions was a method for describing the particular grammar of computer languages. The system is known as Backus-Naur Form.

"Much of my work has come from being lazy. I didn't like writing programs, and so, when I was working on the IBM 701 (an early computer), writing programs for computing missile trajectories, I started work on a programming system to make it easier to write programs," Backus told Think, the IBM employee magazine, in 1979.

Link: Forum Discussion (Thanks Hum)
News source: CNN

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#1 Rytis on 21 Mar 2007 - 15:45
RIP.
#2 Gowcra on 21 Mar 2007 - 15:58
RIP
#3 Havin_it on 21 Mar 2007 - 16:46
Blimey. I'd never heard of the guy (though being a Linux user I've heard of Fortran, YACC and other stuff he seems to have influenced) but that is quite a CV. Sounds like the fields of linguistics (my Uni major) and CS (what I do now) both will mourn him. Shame he only got 15 years' worth of retirement

RIP dude I'll be reading up about all tonight.
#4 Evil Cretin on 21 Mar 2007 - 18:35
RIP
#5 +stifler6478 on 21 Mar 2007 - 19:05
I never heard of the guy, but my professor mentioned him today in my Intro Computer Engineering class. RIP

-Spenser
#6 SkyyPunk on 21 Mar 2007 - 20:31
RIP
and thank the lazy!!!
#7 eAi on 21 Mar 2007 - 21:47
Well, as a Computer Scientist, I've come across some of his work - BNF for example is still used for defining almost all programming languages and protocols.

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