2000 Fellow Award
November 9, 2000
Sofitel San Francisco Bay
For over a decade, The Computer Museum (and now Computer History Museum), has been publicly recognizing individuals of outstanding merit and accomplishment who have contributed to the development of computing broadly-defined. Past Fellows have included: Grace Murray Hopper (1987), Jay Forrester (1995), Ken Olsen (1996), John Backus, Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie, Steve Wozniak (1997), and, most recently, Gordon Moore, Gene Amdahl, and Donald Knuth (1998).
Fellows are chosen on the basis of accomplishment - formal education is not a factor - and are nominated by a panel comprising History Center staff, industry peers, and previous Fellows.
In order to properly assess the historical importance of a possible Fellow's achievements, one criterion is that at least 10 years must have elapsed between a specific contribution and that individual's nomination.The contribution must thus be of a foundational nature, one that has strongly influenced the intellectual, disciplinary, or industrial underpinnings of computing.
There is no preference given to accomplishments in software or hardware, to computer science over electrical engineering or any other formal discipline, to commercial success, or to the nominee's age.
The event typically comprises 250 people - largely from industry and academia - and is of approximately 3 hours duration. Many of Silicon Valley's most prominent businesspeople, academics, and supporters of computer history attend this event to honor those who have changed the theory or practice of computing and who have thus shaped the world in which we live. We hope you will join us this year for this historic, and historical, event as Computer History Museum continues its mission of building an international resource for research in the history of computing.
2000 Fellows
Frances Allen,
for her contributions to program optimization and compiling for parallel computers
Introduced by Anita Borg
Vinton Cerf,
for his contributions to the creation and growth of the Internet
Introduced by Gerald Estrin
Tom Kilburn,
for his contributions to early computer design including random access digital storage, virtual memory and multiprogramming
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