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Top 10 Most Important Tech People of the Decade 268

KarmaWhore writes "For it's 10th anniversary Network Computing has put together what they consider to be the top ten people of the decade. Linus is number three. Gates is number two. " I dunno - lists like this are certainly useless - but it's always a fun debate.
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Top 10 Most Important Tech People of the Decade

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  • But who gets the credit for sand?

    Atoms?
  • What's he done in the 90's? How about Windows 95?

    Yes, but another attempt to copy the Mac OS is hardly that innovative. Besides, it's just one more Windows version.

    How about Windows NT? Granted, not the most stable, secure products ever made, but come on, almost everyone (including half the Slashdot population) uses them! Granted, he did not write every single line of code, but he did lead the company that did. Without his leadership, who knows what would have happened.

    The easy response would be: "Uh, innovation?" But the less-flippant response is that there were plenty of companies (mine included) who were doing Wide Area Networking long before NT was viable. My guess, if Gates has decided to cash in at the start of the 90s, is that Ballmer would have done many of the same things. Even if he had failed where Gates had success, what makes you think that all those companies M$ crushed along the way wouldn't have provided the needed technology?

    Without Windows 95, where would we be? 90 % of us would be out of a job. Computers would not have hit it off 'really big,' because they would still be too hard to use for the idiots who sit at home (yes, those same people who call tech support)

    I guess they would have had to buy Macs or something else easy. Or they could have learned to use Win 3.1. In my experience, those who couldn't figure out Win 3.1 never bothered to learn Win95 either.

    If BillG left Microsoft 10 years ago, would any of this come around?

    Probably. Maybe not at the same speed, or with the same number of casualties along the side of the road, but probably the other tens of thousands of M$ employees would have done something without Gates around.

    Or would you be running DOS or Windows 3.1? ( which was also innovative)

    Actually, both were derivative, not innovate, but yes, business could and did run on those.

    Would 99% of offices have a computer in them?

    Absolutely.

    Or, would you be flipping burgers at BurgerKing? (which runs NT, last time I checked)

    I wasn't flipping burgers before Gates came along, nor was I doing so before those 90's 'innovations' you cite. So why would I be flipping burgers now had Gates retired in 1990?

    Look, M$ as a company has done tremendous things and, by virtue of most folks being too lazy to care, or by virtue of their predatory ways, most of us use M$ software today. But what innovative things has Gates done in the 90s? Another respondant suggested the turnaround of M$ to embrace the Net. That was impressive, but hardly innovative. It was imitative in the extreme.

    I mean, governments have a temendous influence on our lives. That influence doesn't mean they are innovative, however.
    ________________

  • Yes Bill did something....he didn't really make anything personally but he did put market an OS that put a PC in over 75% of the homes in America. Like it or not technology NEEDS marketing and deployment to live.

    And I challange any /. reader between 18 and 25 to prove to me that they didn't get their start on PC's using one of Bill's OS's. I kinda doubt at age 19 many of the readers gunning on Bill now were compiling and hand bootstraping thier linux boxes.

    And to futher torpedo your argument...Linus did do something......he ripped off Andrew Tannebaum.
  • Do you really think that you'd have a computer on your desk for such a small price if it weren't for Bill Gates and Microsoft bringing PC's to the market with Windows? Perhaps he didn't invent Windows, but it was definitely Microsoft who got it out to the people.

    It seems everyone here just wants to hate Microsoft purely for the fact that they aren't Linux. Let's not forget how PC's got onto everyone's desktop to begin with.
  • No, Jamie Zawinski [jwz.org] did enough work that I'd say he'd be the best Netscape candidate there. Marc was just a lawyer who got VC.
    --
  • But if you look at the new focus on making a computer more than a beige box, that has to be attributed to Jobs, or at least his company. Sure to a true geek the color of your hardware makes no difference, but to an everyday user, it makes a lot of difference. That's why you can buy your car in more colors than just black.

    Nate
  • by Bearpaw ( 13080 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @09:30AM (#738776)
    AL GORE INVENTED THE INTERNET! That's what he said. And you know you can trust our polititions.

    This would be funnier if Gore actually said that. He didn't. What he did say was an exaggeration but evidently not enough of one that his opponents could refrain from exaggerating his exaggeration. And their spin seems to have worked really well -- every gullible sucker in the US (of which there are evidently tens of millions) thinks that AL Gore said that he invented the internet.

  • for C and Unixes in general.
  • Surely anyone as "important" as Hitler is going to affect everything, including technology? Besides, the computer was not a direct result of Hitler's actions: it was a response to them. The credit still lies with the mathematicians and engineers who were directly involved.
  • Sorry as I am not a fan of his OS I still must defend Bill Gate's position on the list. I've read the article and it's titled: "The 10 Most Important People of the Decade", not "Top 10 Most Important Tech People of the Decade" as /. has it listed. If it were the argument could be made that since Bill is a CEO and not really a "tech" person he shouldn't be there but as the article is titled he should be. So many readers are quick to gun on the M$ OS's but they are so quick to forget and deny that they probably got their start on PCs running a M$ OS. Do we still run them, no most likely not but as poor as we may think his product is, Mr. Gates did get most of us started on the path we're on.

    As an everyday computer user: "I thank Mr. Gates for giving me a fairly easy to use operating system to cut my teeth on"
    As an educated software engineer: "Mr. Gates we need to talk about that pile you call an OS...."
  • hatless wrote:

    > Steve Jobs would undoubtedly earn a spot in the
    > top 5 in a list covering the 1970s or the 1980s.
    > But in the 1990s?

    > Jobs turned Apple around,

    Perhaps not in the 1990s. Though bringing Apple back from near death and thus giving customers a viable commercial alternative to the Wintel monopoly is nothing to be sneezed at. I think, that with OS X coming next year, we really haven't seen the full impact of Jobs' return. Yet. He may well be flying high on next decade's list.

    > but Apple isn't really important to computing as
    > a whole anymore, not with an 8% market share.

    Neither is Linux, if we are going by market share, as the two are in the same neighborhood, with the one in the lead depending on who you talk to. If you want to go by CompUSA floor space, Linux is a distant third, with Apple #2 and MS #1 (and still idiotic). And I'm writing this on a Linux box, so don't think me a MS troll.

    > but with the exception of case design,
    > Apple--and Steve Jobs--don't shape computing
    > anymore.

    No, MS shapes it, by ripping off Apple, Next, and now their own viruses! But wait till OS X comes out. If Apple doesn't seriously drop the ball, they will have a stable, easy to use, modern OS. On top of really cool hardware, and a bunch of well known apps, it will be seriously attractive to the masses. Then, the only things that will save Linux is that Apple is *not* out to rule the world, and Linux is free and runs on anything. It isn't impossible that OS X will be able to make some serious dents in both Linux and Windows, especially at the end user level. That is Linux' weak point, and MS is too busy with their five year old strategy of merging Win 9.x with Win 2000/NT to notice.

    > Palm should get props for making the handheld
    > computer into something for the masses back in
    > '97.

    Indeed. However, it would be nice if Palm continued to innovate, rather than just multiplying its models.
  • Perhaps Jobs does deserve his place, not for what he did at Apple, but for what he did at NeXT

    If Tim B-L deserves 1st for knocking together a web-browser, then maybe Jobs deservers his place for producing the box that Tim insisted was a neccessary tool to develope his hypertext system.

    Of course Tim's real motivation may not have been the objective C RAD platform, or the UI, but because, like the rest of us, he found those black cubes and their laser disks rather sexy

    Whatever you say you cant escape it, the WWW was invented on a Jobs machine.

  • Whether you like BillG or not, he was personally involved in creating IE and IIS - regardless of what you thin of those products, he was more than a figurehead in relation to their development
    --
    DigitalContent PAC [weblogs.com]
  • I also vote for Larry. He synthesized the "Unix way of doing things" and added a number of optimized commonly required library functions and wrapped it in package called Perl. Almost all early internet dynamic content was driven by Perl code. And Perl is still relevant to today and used by many large and small internet installations either for serving dynamic content or in the backend for content and source maintenance and prototyping.

    Yes, now there are other options Python, php, asp, Java Servlets, etc. but Perl was the first and is still one of the best ways to develop applications for the web.
  • Yeah. I'll bring the KoolAid. Now, where's that comet?
  • Before you start flaming, remember: Satan comes before God, because without Satan, who would appreciate God?
  • Turing contributed something. Bill bought a copy of basic and had Paul Allen work on it.
    --
  • True. This is obviously the view of the modern media.

    After a second look, I notice Hemos titled it "Top 10 Most Important Tech People ...", where Network Computing titles it, "The 10 Most Important People of the Decade", and then goes on to refer within the body of the article as, "Most Influential People of the Decade"

    3 different titles, probably better titled, "Top Ten People Whom Have Influenced Tech". We'd still have our bones to pick over them, but at least it's not as wild as assuming Steve Jobs still keeps a propeller beanie on his hatrack.


    --
    Chief Frog Inspector
  • On the other hand, where would the GNU project be without a stable, popular kernel? (It's only recently that the Hurd has become usable.) Linux has spread the GNU tools more widely than GNU itself has, now that the OS is penetrating deeper into business and personal environments -- the core of GNU proper has always been academia, which is an important but smaller field.

    Bottom line, it's great for users to have a compiler like GCC and a kernel like Linux. There is no conflict, and no need for there to be one.

  • by dragonfly_blue ( 101697 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @07:41AM (#738798) Homepage
    heehee just kidding... although you have to admit that for a while "Free Kevin" was pretty much a rallying cry around these parts...
  • by MousePotato ( 124958 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @08:48AM (#738801) Homepage Journal
    October 2, 2000 - Network Copmuting Corporate Headquarters - Manhasset NY. - After reviewing numerous letters, Network Computing has reconsidered the companies Top Ten individuals in the technology sector and issues this revised list. We apologize to our shareholders (and to the FTC, SEC et al) for the erroneous posting of the previous list and its inclusion of Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, we had no idea that mentioning thier names here would lead to such a rapid plunge in the value of our stock. Additionally, in order to place a proper perspective on the technology sector, we will be forth coming with out new 'Meglamaniac Top Ten' as soon as the results are tabulated. The Meglamaniac Top Ten will be sure to include Mr. Gates, Mr. Jobs, Mr. Perot, Mr.Gerstner and Mr. Ellison. There's something about the computing industry that lends itself to achievements by the following individuals... 1. Tux
    2. Dilbert
    3. Ren & Stimpy (tie)
    4. Tick
    5. Kenny
    6. Kyle
    7. Cartman
    8. Stan
    9. Chef
    10. Brian Boitano

    Disclaimer: Network computing is in no way responsible for the results, outcome or bias displayed in the Top Ten list and assumes no liability for it. Please don't email us with your questions or comments as this is out final list. This list is in no way an attempt to placate the script kiddie who has sent us 3 million emails since 10:00 AM EST voting for Dogbert.
    Note to self: IF s/N ratio>=facts(old news + /. $authors)
  • Ok Jim Clark's claim to fame is he was able to turn 2 different multibillion dollar companies into shit in a very short span of time.

    Larry Ellison - made Oracle the #1 market share DB and kept it at exactly the same proportion over a ten year period somehow making himself a billionaire even while turning his support and service organizations into complete shit.

    LVG - what can you say ex RJR ex Nabisco ex McKinsy antitechnocrat who rode the greatest ecnomic bubble ever to a 'salvaging miracle' at Big Blue. How hard could it be to take a basically sound company apply textbook mgt consulting techniques to it while the rest of the tech world shot up into the stratosphere in value.

    Steve Jobs - the shrinking violet permanent temp CEO watched his company go efectively nowhere in ten years. At least it didn't go toes up! (famous quote - 'all you need to make a fortune in this business is a garage and 5 million dollars').

    Rick Boucher - oh yeah Congress is at the vangard of thought leadership and getting shit done at warp speed. In 10 years they'll still be debating about the shape of the bargaining table.

    This list is basically a bunch of people who were either too shy to really fuck things up or just arrogant enough to fuck them up anyhow. Either way they are experts at being where the shit aint and managing to blame it all on someone else.
  • OK, this is going to seem flamebaitish, but it's really not. Why is Linus on this list? Granted, it's a good operating system and its free, but it's not the first. Considering, as well, the hundreds of students that have created free OS's in Operating Systems courses in college, having Linus makes me more skeptical.

    Woz I totally agree with. He should be on the list. I also agree with the idea that Gates should be somewhere near the top. We're talking "most influential to technology" not "what's best for technology". There are, however, thousands of other technophiles creating software, chips, and hacks that deserve to be on this list. When you summarize it down to 10, you lose the work of those people.

  • But he didn't do any of that stuff... he was just the boss. That's like saying the CEO of 3M is a great contributer to chemical engineering. Gates is merely a competent business man...

    "Free your mind and your ass will follow"

  • I'm anxious to see an interface that can rival the Windows interface.

    You've never used a Mac, have you?

    --K
    ---
  • The nice people at NC are just posting things people will read.

    They are pretty much right about the people on the list, though of course they're too mainstream to pick up any unsung heroes that have more to do with the way the web turned out, for example.

    They also make some fairly silly statements, like "AppleTalk is still the easiest method of file and print sharing for casual computer users" or "Attribute all this, if you will, to Jobs' vision of the Macintosh: It's for people who `Think Different.'" I know, I know, I'm picking on the Steve Jobs part of the article. But let's face it, NetBEUI is just as easy as apple's networking, possibly easier since you can use a standard folder/file context rather than the chooser or network browser. And the Apple People may want to think different, but apple's sugar-sweet (sugar-water?) packaging can't be rationally seen as anything but an encouragement to think the same.

    I personally would have liked to see people on this list that I hadn't ever heard of before (Not just people whose names I'd forgotten, and people whose names I can't escape.) Oh, and here, I just found another inaccuracy: "In his early days at Sun Microsystems, Khosla participated in the creation of the first and, today, the most successful RISC-based platform, proving that there's a world beyond the Wintel phenomenon." BZZZZZT. Thank you for playing. IBM put together the first RISC architecture (though possibly the least successful:) The ROMP architecture, which was found in the IBM RT-PC. Thank you, Network Computing, for consistently getting the facts wrong.

    They seem to have Berners-Lee's microbio written out fairly well, one hopes out of a sense of reverence. And of course, as one would expect, they are ritualistically (perhaps even fetishistically) correct on the BillyG front, perhaps more out of fear of lawsuit than for any other reason. But even in the large print at the top of Linus' data they hose things up; Linus created a kernel. He no more created an operating system than I created a waste treatment plant in the bathroom this morning. This is not to denigrate the man or his achievements, which are nonetheless very important to the point we have reached today. But please, let's try for some precision.

    All in all, another mediocre article from a mediocre publication. Personally, I'd like to see a "top ten slashdotters" article. Can you imagine the height of the flames?

    I can only dream.

  • Strange to see a slashdot sig adapted from a Jurassic Park quote:

    "Your Scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should."
    -----
  • Because of Saddam's aggressiveness, the Gulf War came about, during which a lot of American technology (Patriot missles, A10 Warthog, etc) was tried in battle for the first time and found to work really well.

    Huh? "Patriot missile" and "work really well" are two phrases I never thought I'd see in a sentence together.
    Some more information on the patriot. [bayarea.net]
    IIRC, the A10 was around long before the Gulf War, and in fact was in the middle of being phased out before the war started (and the Pentagon realized that they didn't have anything that could replace it.)
  • by Accipiter ( 8228 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @08:55AM (#738828)
    Berners-Lee created the Web while at CERN (the European Laboratory for Particle Physics) in Switzerland in 1990, as a method of keeping documentation current and available to the multitudes of researchers there.

    And I'll bet that he later refuted that statement by claiming he was tired when he said it.

    /HUMOR

    Anyway, I definitely agree with Bill Gates' position on that list. Like the article said, whether you love him or hate him, there's no doubt he helped shape the computer industry into what it is today. (For those of you who doubt this is a good thing, we're HERE, aren't we?) Windows isn't the best OS on the planet for a lot of things, but it's inspired competition - and rigorous competition helps everyone. (I'm anxious to see an interface that can rival the Windows interface. It may not be the best OS there is, but there isn't an interface that comes close to the ease that Windows provides. That's the problem with X.)

    If we had an interface that was as good as the Windows UI (and provided the same continuity! Important!), with the power and stability of Linux - the sky's the limit.

    I was disappointed I didn't see MY name on the list, but....

    -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?

  • Gates did two things in the 90's:

    1) Going into the mid 90's, Microsoft thought they had it made... they owned the desktop after all. Apple was dying, no other competition was on the horizon. Meanwhile, this little thing called "The Internet" and the little app that was available on it called "The World Wide Web" appeared. People in the trenches seized on the new idea as the Next Big Thing. But, up on the bridge of the SS. Microsoft, it was business as usual... they were passing out MSN floppies and waiting for their captured audience to flock to them. A *lot* of people (myself included) rubbed their hands gleefully waiting for Microsoft to founder on the rocks.

    At almost the last second, before Microsoft's monopoly was rendered moot by Internet and network computing, Gates & co. realized that they were about to get clobbered. Gates managed in an incredibly short amount to time to turn his behemoth of a company around and take advantage of the Internet. All products became "Internet enabled" (at least t the point that they could add a bullet list to the "new features section"). They also rammed a behemoth-to-be called Netscape and sank them handily. Considering how many other major companies in the IT sector have perished or have been greatly diminished by previous paradigm shifts (i.e. DEC in the age of the PC), Gate's feat was pretty impressive.

    2) Another thing that Microsoft did during the 90's is make major inroads into the server market. Going into the 90's, Novell, DEC, IBM, and various UNIXen owned the server markets. Microsoft has managed to carve out a fairly handy piece of the server sector pie, a very competitive sector compared to its familiar desktop zone where it has had Apple on the ropes for a while. The very fact that many people feel they have to become MSCE's pretty much makes Gates a shoe-in for the top ten list put together by an IT magazine.

  • except mine's in the present tense 'cause there's still software engineers coding frivolous (and sometimes dangerous) programs and modules.
  • I totally agree with you -- and I find it rare that people look at it from that perspective
    My best argument for this is that people were using linux before it came with GNU stuff.
    People weren't using GNU before it came with Linux
    Until people use GNU/Hurds as much as Linux.. I'm calling it Linux.
  • Although Bill Gates is more of a name of the 80's and could have been left off on those grounds. (Along with Larry Ellison and Steve Jobs and Vinod Khosla)

    Tim probably is an important name at least as far as consumer tech goes. Linus I'm not so sure about. An equivilent of Linux probably would have happened without him. (GNU Hurd perhaps)
  • Sanford ('Spamford') Wallace and Cyber Promotions.... they certainly affected the course of the Internet during the late 90's, regardless of how low and turd-like you think he might be.

    I think I read somewhere he's planning a comeback....
  • I suppose I should have clarified that statement a bit more.
    My point was, Linux was a functional operating system *before* GNU was a part of it
    While GNU did have a number of utilities on all platforms at the time. There was not ANY operating system that relied and would not be a functional unix system without it.
    Linux is the first that would be considered dependant on GNU.
    That was more or less what I was getting at, also isolating the case to PC users.
    My apologies for not being more specific.
  • It's just an expression.

    Soylent Green is people!
  • "Linus is a personable Scandinavian"? Perhaps you would find it educational to read through the kernel development mailing list archives. ;-)

    Personally, I suspect Stallman's facial hair is what kept him off the list. I would think Stallman looks a bit too much like Fidel Castro for the delicate sensibilities of mild-mannered media.
  • Hm, well if you weren't so gestapo and close minded you'd understand I was more or less referring to dependance.
    Right now, a linux system is typically gnu libc. Hence it relies on GNU.
    See my point here?
    Just because it uses utilities or whatever doesn't mean jack, and it is because of zealots like yourself that make me cringe at the RMS-tangents that enforce Linux is not an operating system.
    Bull shit.
    Linux is not an operating system it is a kernel.
    GNU is, well.. it's just a bunch of applications and libraries. It's not an operating system either.
    Linux is more of an operating system then GNU, because you can get Linux running quite functionally without GNU software.
    Am I bashing GNU? No.
    Am I saying GNU sucks? No.
    Am I saying GNU is necessary at the moment? Absolutely, and it has benefited tremendously.
    But Linux is far more of a contribution on both a social level and technical than GNU in my opinion, and until firm evidence is provided otherwise, and not the incessant "RMS said this!" crap that his blind followers spew constantly.
    RMS is a hippie, that is the bottom line. He has a idealistic approach -- but c'mon. This is capitalism, and his approach is just like communism. A great system if you kill all the greed. Hell, I'm greedy. I code for money. I enjoy it.
    Linus Torvalds understands that, RMS still thinks that people will understand the errors of their ways and just get along.
    Until then, I run Linux.. I have GNU utilities that I use on a daily basis. Unfortunately, I think I am so strongly opposed to RMS because of his incessant desire to promote calling it "GNU/Linux" and in that desire often times coming across as either an asshole, or an idiot. Sometimes both. It is a shame because the man is brilliant.. but brilliance doesn't win by itself. You have to have a degree of common sense, and I think that is where RMS is failing miserably at.
  • Where's Al Gore?


    That's what I love about them high-school girls. I get older, they stay the same age... yes they do.
    --Wooderson 1976
  • And a link to what he actually did do...

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/13640.html [theregister.co.uk]

  • I'm anxious to see an interface that can rival the Windows interface. It may not be the best OS there is, but there isn't an interface that comes close to the ease that Windows provides
    There's this little-known user interface system called MacOS. They use these funny little pictures and a rat to choose between them. Check it out at http://www.apple.com [apple.com]
  • In the 90s, Microsoft just played catch up

    Very strange. Microsoft was big in the 1980s but became *huge* in the 1990s. Windows pre-3.0 was an obscure relic. MS-DOS was crusty, and kept people from becoming common household items. Windows 3.0 took off like a shot, followed quickly by 3.1. It turned into the standard operating system. Sure, Microsoft missed the rise of the web, but everyone running Navigator was running it on Windows anyway. In a nutshell, Windows became the ubiquitous operating system. Word became the standard word processor. Excel became the standard spreadsheet. Internet Explorer became the standard browser. Visual Basic became the standard enterprise application development tool. Visual C++ became the dominant commercial C/C++ compiler. You can belittle this any way you want, but that's where we are today.
  • I'm sure a lot of people would have taken it personally, regardless of how Hemos phrased it. What I fail to understand is why these same people continue to read slashdot if they find it so inherently offensive.
    --
  • by RayChuang ( 10181 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @12:53PM (#738886)
    I know I'll be flamed for this (and get moderated down), but let's face it: if it weren't for Windows 95 with its built-in Dial-Up Networking feature that included TCP/IP support a LOT less people would be on the Internet right now. I mean, that's how Netscape became popular when its 2.x and 3.x versions could use that feature.

    While Linux can be lauded for its kernel stability, the fact that Linux is based on the UNIX--with one of the most user-unfriendly command line interfaces around--has kept it out of the spotlight of serious users until today with several development efforts to give it a more "friendly" feel for newbies.

    Let's face it: without Microsoft giving 85% of the world's desktop computers the ability to easily setup an Internet connection, the "Internet economy" would not have taken off like it did.
  • Okay, I'm going to play devil's advocate...

    Because of Saddam's aggressiveness, the Gulf War came about, during which a lot of American technology (Patriot missles, A10 Warthog, etc) was tried in battle for the first time and found to work really well.

    Does that get him on the list? No, not really, but Spudley's got a valid point. World leaders and other non-technical but prominent people can have a massive effect on technology. To wit, would we have had radar or jet engines or the Bomb as soon as we did were it not for Hitler? For that matter, the invention of the electronic digital computer was closely entwined with the attempt to break Nazi codes. So it could be argued that Hitler had a large effect on technology in the 1940's.
  • As stated in the text above, lists like this are really useless. It's just such an objective thing.

    To be fair, it's hard to imagine a list like this not including Bill Gates, but how long has Linus been 'important'? Long enough to be number 3 in the top ten most important people of the decade? Hmmm...

    And it depends how you define 'important'. Should Saddam Hussein be in there? How about Vladimir Putin, or any of a range of world leaders who've had their say over the last ten years.

    My top ten list will be completely different to another person's. That's the way it is.

    <irony mode=on>
    Now, if I put up a top-ten list of most important people, would I have been mentioned on Slashdot? Probably only if I put Linus in there somewhere...
    </irony>
  • What you meant to say was "Where would GNU/Linux be without GCC and GNU Libc?"
  • Where would Linux be without the BSOD? Chalk another point up for Bill.

    Regards, Ralph.

  • Is there any doubt that this man is not one of the most consummate programmers alive? Carmack & crew at id have done some of the most stunning work in the field of 3d gaming that any of us have ever seen. The man's work is nothing short of prodigious.

    He is certainly very influential in the entire industry as well. John is a major supporter of opengl (remember the OGL vs. directx days?) He is on several advisory boards in the industry... he has his hands into everything from Apple to Microsoft.

    When JohnC speaks, people listen.

  • Tim and Bill were obvious choices...the editors would have gotten fired if they didn't put those two on top; Not, of course, because they really are that important, but because they're the big names. It would be like rating Yale and Harvard halfway down a top-ten list of colleges. It doesn't matter how good they are, they're just *supposed* to be at the top.

    As far as Linus goes, I don't think we have anything to worry about....after all, he's going to be the most important tech person of this *coming* decade!

  • by BlowCat ( 216402 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @07:49AM (#738907)
    Where would Linux be without GCC and GNU Libc?
  • by generic-man ( 33649 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @07:50AM (#738913) Homepage Journal
    So just because Bill Gates outranked Linus Torvalds, this list is "pretty useless"? Why do I suspect that if Linus was ranked higher than Gates, Slashdot would be holding a rallying cry and citing it as a sign that Linux really is the greatest achievement in the history of the world?
  • The title is "The 10 Most Important People of the Decade" Decade being 10 years. I think RMS's major contributions were made more than 10 years ago. Sure they carry forward into this decade, but if you use that logic why not put Turing or Shockley on there?

  • by cburley ( 105664 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @10:49AM (#738921) Homepage Journal
    My best argument for this is that people were using linux before it came with GNU stuff. People weren't using GNU before it came with Linux

    If that's your "best argument", you're neck-deep in buffalo dung, my friend, for that argument is exactly backwards.

    Many of us were not only working on GNU software before Linux, we were using it, on a reasonably wide variety of underlying kernels -- SunOS, AIX (or whatever ran on RS/6000's in those days), and so on.

    And I'm pretty sure when I started running Linux 0.96pl2 or whatever patch level it was, it already came with GNU utilities.

    If there was indeed a time when Linux came without GNU stuff, the number of people using it was probably less than .1% of the number of people who were already using GNU software without the Linux kernel running underneath!

    Until people use GNU/Hurds as much as Linux.. I'm calling it Linux.

    Not that I insist you change your mind now that you've been given a clue about GNU/Linux history...but you might want to consider either calling it GNU/Linux sooner, or maybe when (or if) people use Linux with non-GNU tools in greater numbers (and this has long been "threatened", anyway)...

    ...or you might consider waiting to call it GNU/Linux until after we see whether the FSF calls their future OS "GNU/Hurd" or simply "The Hurd".

    If the FSF uses "Hurd" to denote both the kernel and the OS, that certainly suggests it's okay to use "Linux" to denote the whole GNU+Linux(+otherstuff) OS. But if they call it "GNU/Hurd", they'll be risking suggesting that "Hurd" is no more a creation of Project GNU (or the FSF) than is Linux, as well as implying a useful system could be put together out of the Hurd kernel plus non-GNU utilities (and these are, respectively, false and true), which might be too risky for them. (Then again, maybe the GNU toolchain will be considered ubiquitous by the time the Hurd gets widespread usage?)

    In the meantime, the fact that RMS couldn't get through a slashdot interview (or response), in which he continued his attempts to promote the "GNU/Linux" name on the basis that honesty in naming is important, without himself resorting to "name games" to smear George W. Bush, calling him by the invented nickname "shrub", strongly suggests that RMS doesn't have sufficient moral authority to persuade anyone to use "GNU/Linux" over "Linux", even if he has many other good arguments for such a choice.

    But, in case I have any moral authority (which does not seem likely to me), I do prefer "GNU/Linux" to denote the class of OS that combines the Linux kernel with GCC, glibc, and other GNU utilities, without denoting anything about a windowing system, graphics capabilities, or all that much about networking, etc., FWIW. And I still wish, or recommend, that Linus would decide to wean Linux off its dependency on GCC, which, last I checked, was quite excessive, leading to too many cases where Linux depends on being compiled by a particular version of GCC, and making it harder for a true non-GNU Linux OS to develop.

  • Are you talking about those clamshell things with calculator-y keyboards exemplified by the Sharp Wizards, or are you talking about the Casio Zoomer?

    The Zoomer was practical if you didn't mind pausing a second after each letter you wrote with Grafitti, and you didn't really care if syncing took ten minutes. I guess. I didn't say first PDA, which was pretty much Apple's, nor did I say the first PDA of the right size, which was the Zoomer and its slow, clumsy ilk.

    The Zoomer didn't fail because of bad marketing. It was in every Radio Shack in North America displayed up front and given pride of place in the catalog. It failed because it was a deeply flawed product that did many things, none very well.

    The Newton didn't fail because people were too primitive and stupid to understand its genius. The Newton failed because even when they got the speed and handwriting stuff right, they were still trying to sell the new models for $1100 USD and they were the size of a rack of barbecued ribs.

    The Palm was the first PDA that had the right size (zero carry), the right price (under $400 from the start) and the right interface (simple and efficient). Consider this: it took Microsoft and its hardware partners three years and three product iterations after the Palm was introduced to figure this out and make a product that could grab more than 10% market share.
  • by hatless ( 8275 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @07:51AM (#738926)
    Steve Jobs would undoubtedly earn a spot in the top 5 in a list covering the 1970s or the 1980s. But in the 1990s?

    Jobs turned Apple around, but Apple isn't really important to computing as a whole anymore, not with an 8% market share. They make nice, leading-edge machines, they have a nice UI, and they're swell at industrial design again, but with the exception of case design, Apple--and Steve Jobs--don't shape computing anymore.

    Where's Jeff Hawkins? He's arguably the inventor of the first practical PDA. Just as Apple deserves enormous credit for making existing "outsider" technologies palatable in the '70s and '80s, Palm should get props for making the handheld computer into something for the masses back in '97.
  • Sure its debatable, but I would give them mention.
  • Testing and promoting US Military technical advancements was not the reasoning the voices in his head used to convince him to attack Kuwait.

    Soylent Green is people!
  • by wmoyes ( 215662 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @07:53AM (#738940)
    Many of us were first intrigued by computer games, and for an honorable mention we need Ken Williams. He was the founder of Sierra on-line and created the first graphical adventure games.

    Most of my early motivation in computers was do to my desire to figure out "How did that do THAT?". Which quickly followed by "How do I do that myself". I am sure many geeks today feel the same way.

    Don't forget Sierra on-line was one of the early companies to promote sound boards (especially theRoland MT-32), they stared on-line gaming a long time ago (remember the Sierra Network), and they also became heavily involved in 3-D after they bought Dynamix. They also were early adopters of CD-ROM based games. I have to say part of Sierra's problems was they were ahead of their time by about 2 years. They were in markets that didn't exist yet.

    I have to mention that there is a strong Internet bias in the top 10 list. Some of these people I have never heard of. Remember that the Internet only became main stream a few years ago, but games have been main stream much longer (and therefore have influenced more people).

  • I think what Microsoft did NOT anticipate was the fact that people were less interested in "proprietary" online services and more and more interested in connecting to the Internet using their local ISP.

    Outside of America Online, how many "proprietary" services has prospered and grown today since 1995? Even Microsoft Network and Prodigy have evolved into essentially another ISP like Earthlink.

    As for the UNIX command line, yes, it is very powerful, but trying to figure out the syntax is like an American trying to learn Chinese at times. And some UNIX fans think that's the "charm" of the operating system....
  • Er... it's the top ten people of the decade.

    While Alan Kay, Steve Wozniak, and RMS are certainly more important than many of the names on that list, remember that some their most significant achievements (the GUI, the Apple II, the GNU project and GPL license) are more than ten years old.

    However, I agree that John Carmack ought to be on that list.

    Torrey Hoffman (Azog)
  • On Solaris, DOS, Windows and the BSDs?
  • Heck yeah, the A10 is the best at what it does (Forward Air Support--blowing up bunches of tanks :)

    Unfortunatly they also had the highest losses (when your job description includes flying past SAM sites and man portable SAM launches at low speed it is rather hard to avoid getting shot at.)
  • <sarcasm> Where would the Internet be without his brilliant invention, one-click-shopping? </sarcasm>

    ---
  • Judge Jackson!

    You GO girl!

    Soylent Green is people!
  • Since its conception it has influenced the minds of at least 7 software developers. That many people commented on my quote in a non-negative way; most of them heeding it as advice. Which is why, on the bottom of every one of my comments, it says:
  • People weren't using GNU before it came with Linux

    Are you on glue? PC users weren't using GNU before Linux (unless Minix used them, but I don't know that anyone used Minix anyway), but other people (largely academics) were.

  • [spoof]
    Due to Bill Gates beating out Linus Torvalds in the "10 Most Important People of the Decade" list, the foreheads of Linux users around the world were adorned with red and purple bruises, apparently caused by the Linux users beating themselves on the head with their gilded, titanium-cover editions of "Kernel Hacking, edition 2.1.15".

    Several concussions, and even two fatalities, have been reported so far. When reached for comment, Bill Gates said, "What were they thinking? It was just another Top Ten list which I nearly won. Do they do this every night Letterman reads his?"

    [/spoof]

  • It can't be a meaningful list. Where's John Katz?????
    --
  • I must be number 11, tho. Its so nice to be in such distinguished company :-)

    The ones I miss are people made a difference, rather than just tons of money. Linus and TB-L made a difference because they were techies, not just to make money. Bill G. and Larry E. are just businessmen in a pissing contest to see who can scam more money off an ignorant public.

    the AC
  • You GO girl!

    Um.......Girl?

    -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?

  • I think you're forgetting that Bill Gates used to be a programmer himself.

    The operative phrase being 'used to be'.

    Gates is not a hacker any more, he's a suit.

    --K
    ---
  • Actually, I used to administer a network that was 1/3 Macintosh. These consisted of 8500s, the First G3s (In the beige case), and the newer G3s (in the translucent blue cases.)

    I find MacOS (8.0 and 8.5, the systems on our network) to be clunky, uninformative (Windows does a SLIGHTLY better job on this end, but not much.), irritating, and in some cases, condescending. "Oops! A system error occured!" (Cute little bomb icon and all.)

    Gimme a break. How about an informative system error message, or an error dialog that will let me save my work, and close my applications BEFORE hitting that [RESTART] button. (You know the dialog box I'm talking about. The one with the red-laced title bar that won't let you click anything else onscreen.) And what's up with those sounds? A car crash? Come on. This isn't a kid's computer, but it acts like it. The whole 'Drag to the trash to unmount' idea needs to go too.

    I can go on, but I don't think I need to.

    The only interface I consider to be superior to Windows would be The Console(tm). You have all the power, right there. No cute decorations, no fancy interface, just raw power. The command line is superior, because in a Graphical environment, you have to click your way to your command. Multiple steps.

    On the prompt, you mentally choose your command, and do it on the first step.

    It's not as pretty as a GUI, but it's FAR more powerful.

    -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?

  • I can see how Tim Berners-Lee and Linus got on the list. Certainly the work they did early in this decade had a tremendous influence on the world as the decade unfolded.

    But Gates? What's he done in the 90s? Now if this were a list of the 80s, I would agree. He helped turn M$ into a powerhouse during the 80s. But by 1990, it was already dominant, and what's new since then? Windows? Same old, same old, but with newer bugs. Word? Uh, 80s. Bob? Uh, forget that... Buying off congressmen? Maybe that was new for the 90s, I dunno. Oh, I get it! Lying in court! That was definately a 90s sort of thing.

    Here is a quote from the article justifying the choice:

    "People who admire him point to his unwavering vision for Windows as the universal operating system, and Microsoft Corp.'s leadership in developing applications for that environment. "

    ROFL! "Unwavering vision for Windows" = lack of vision for anything else! And M$'s "leadership in developing applications for that environment" = killing any other company who tried to do the same.
    ________________

  • Read the fucking article at all? They didn't say that. They said most important people with no T-E-C-H.
  • by AFCArchvile ( 221494 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @08:00AM (#738975)
    The title is "The 10 Most Important People of the Decade."
    Of the decade. Not 30 years ago, not 60 years ago, but the timespan including all dates 10 years ago or more recent.

    If you still want to see the Unix creators' names in lights, then go to another top ten list. Or better yet, go in a cave and make your own. And don't come out until you can live for today!


  • i'll probably be moderated down for saying so, since there's so much anti-Richard sentiment on the /. these days, but shouldn't Rich have got some mention when Linus is being posted as #3? Come on, at least give him 3b.


    1. INTERACTIVE [mikegallay.com]
      1. ENTERTAINMENT

  • You said 'Tech People' and I see Steve Jobs on the list. He hasn't been tech in ages, he's just a suit.


    --
    Chief Frog Inspector
  • I normally dont respond to AC posts
    But thank you for proving my point as to the zealot-attitude of RMS-disciples.
    You people will just discount any opinion that does not coincide with the "GNU/Linux" philosphy as being portrayed by a mindless idiot that doesn't know what they are talking about.
    I just find it funny, how instead of actually reading and listening to what I said you chose to insult me and call me names. Thanks for further backing up the parent post, I appreciate the assistance.
    But until you people learn how to actually debate and hold a rational discussion instead of blindly claming everyone is wrong and insult them then you wont gain publicity.
    Now how is the clueless moron?
    Re-read the above part, "brilliance doesn't win, common sense is required" and you sir, seem to have neither, really.
  • by v4mpyr ( 185039 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @08:03AM (#738982)
    Hey, it's really nice to see that Elias Levy made the list. He's a hell of a guy and really deserves it. Lodes of congratulations to him. ;-)

    --
  • I find MacOS (8.0 and 8.5, the systems on our network) to be clunky, uninformative (Windows does a SLIGHTLY better job on this end, but not much.), irritating, and in some cases, condescending. "Oops! A system error occured!" (Cute little bomb icon and all.)

    Ok, so in NT we have big manly BSODs or GPFs instead of cute little bombs.

    Gimme a break. How about an informative system error message, or an error dialog that will let me save my work, and close my applications BEFORE hitting that [RESTART] button.

    Are you saying Windows can do this? News to me. When an app GPFs, generally that's it for your data.
    I have never seen any warning like 'Your machine is about to BSOD! Would you like to save your work?'...

    The whole 'Drag to the trash to unmount' idea needs to go too.

    Yeah, just like 'click Start to shut down the machine' needs to go, right?

    The only interface I consider to be superior to Windows would be The Console(tm).

    It's not as pretty as a GUI, but it's FAR more powerful.

    I love the console as much as any UNIX nerd, but console vs. GUI was not my point at all.
    My point was that, IMO, MacOS has the best *GUI* out there.
    Yes, it has some annoying quirks (like no command line by default), but I think it comes off as being better designed than the Windows GUI.

    --K
    Mmmm...Holy war goodness.
    ---
  • Shouldn't Al Gore be on that list, for creating the internet?

    Even so, the internet was created in the mid 1970s, not the 1990s. People making fun of Gore should at least have some basic understanding of things themselves.
  • I don't think it matters where Bill is on the poll. I think it matters that he shouldn't be there at all. Ditto for Larry Ellison. Those men do nothing buy make money off of their company. They've not done any inovative work for the company (unless you count managing as that, and even Bill hasn't been a manager for a while now).

    Tim Berners-Lee is there. He did something. Linus did something. Bill made money. Innovation in technology? Not Bill.
    --
  • by cyber-vandal ( 148830 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @08:06AM (#738996) Homepage
    That's because Linus is a personable Scandinavian, whereas RMS, for all his genius and talent, is quite a scary human being (like all true fanatics). This is a media list, not a geek list.
  • If you're going to get pedantic:

    Without MULTICS there would be no UNIX.

    Therefore, MULTICS is the root of the WWW. :)

    Well, lets go back to sand.

    The WWW is based on computers and computers are based on silicon. Silicon comes from sand.

    Well sand is based on atoms, .........

    Enough already

  • Well, there might be reasons to question the partiality of the list makers. As you can read on Linus's entry:

    Linus Torvalds (...) did what no one else has been able to do: By creating an operating system (...) he got the attention of big companies like Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Sun and many other PC makers and, most significant, Microsoft

    Hmm... makes you wonder who these guys were rooting for in the first place...
  • I know, this is a controversial opinion, but Java's made a mark on the industry, and its entire span of influence has been within this decade, so perhaps its creator should be on this list.

    At any rate, I see more of a reason for Gosling to be in the top 10 this decade, than Jobs or Gates, whose major influences were in the last decade.

    But yes, lists like this are stupid.

  • by kirwin ( 71594 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @08:07AM (#739005)
    Where are Bill Joy, James Gosling, Eric Allman, Brian Behlendorf, David Miller, and Larry Wall. What about Bob Young, Eric S. Raymond, Richard Stallman, Alan Cox, Ted Tso, and Wietse Venema?

    Most of these choices are awful.

    1. Tim Berners-Lee: Ok, this is a damn good choice

    2. Bill Gates: What the hell has Bill Gates personally done in the 90's? 80's maybe, not a very important person in the 90's.

    3. Linux Torvalds: Linus bringeth the kernel. Linus bringeth a new Unix revolution. Linux bringeth good attributes to this list.

    4. Jim Clark: Jim did an amazing thing. He sold out his company to both AOL and Sun! (Note: sold out)

    5. Larry Ellison: All Ellison does is skydive and ensure that we commoners cannot afford Oracle.

    6. Lou Gerstner: Famous for implementing IBM's latest "Me too" philosophy.

    7. Steve Jobs: I rarely hear his name...which is a good thing.(I hate him more than Jon Katz)

    8. Elias Levy: Interesting choice. I don't think he should be regarded as one of the most important, though.

    9. Rep. Rick Boucher: Of course, the token politician

    10. Vinod Khosla: It's about time someone remembered Vinod. Good choice

  • Network Computing making a list of important world political leaders would be like Mad Magazine doing a list of the top 10 Broadway musicals. It might be funny, but it certainly wouldn't be relevant. Who looks in Mad for a genuine review of theatre? I guess the same idiots who look in a technical/business publication for political commentary.

    --

  • And Vinod Khosla founded Sun in the early 80's, which is something the discography about him liked to point out several times.

    Jobs? Over half the discussion of him details what he did for Apple BEFORE 1990.

    Same deal with Gates.

    Since the people who wrote the article were apparently willing to blur the lines a bit by focusing on so many past deeds, getting snippy and pointing out the actual creation date of the internet may not mean a whole lot.

    As it is, Gore's infamous quote has only appeared within the past ten years, and to 99% of the world's population, the 90's *was* the birth of the internet.

    Does that qualify as basic understanding? :)
  • Oh, boy. Before you make a post like this, you really need to look at the context. /. deep-linked. If you go to the front page, though, it says this: Help us celebrate as we unveil networking's 10 most influential people.

    So, uh, Nelson Mandela really would have been a bad choice.
  • by AltGrendel ( 175092 ) <(su.0tixe) (ta) (todhsals-ga)> on Monday October 02, 2000 @08:10AM (#739016) Homepage
    Perl, Perl, Perl!!! Where would Apache be without it? ...or Slashdot for that matter.
  • IMHO, as much as dislike much of Microsft's policies, Gates certainly deserves to be listed as number one in the list ... of the 80s.

    You're wrong.

    In the 1980s, PCs were still in a weird position. It wasn't until Windows 3.0 was released in 1990 that things went through the roof. By the late 90s, Windows-based computers were ubiquitous. Word completely trounced all competitors, too (remember, Word Perfect dominated the late 80s). Excel dominated the spreadsheet market (remember Lotus 1-2-3 and VisiCalc?). Bill Gates wasn't personally responsible for any of this, of course, but Windows and Microsoft took over the computing world in the 1990s. The previous decade was a wind-up.
  • What do you mean? He asked a whole bunch of people to write his Kernel for him.


  • by generic-man ( 33649 ) on Monday October 02, 2000 @08:23AM (#739024) Homepage Journal
    That's not true. Bill Gates is one of the most prolific [amazon.com] authors in history. His visions are leading the Internet down a new path -- not one of command-line numbskullery, but one where the User Experience is king and the user's wishes are second to no one.

    Won't you join in?
  • Everyone else seems to like it, so I'm leaving it. Besides, it serves as a reminder to the programming community to investigate the benefit to society that their creations will give (if any.)
  • Actually, I quite agree with Mr. Gates position, at least in regard to his contribution to the free software movement. Bill Gates (and his evil empire) is the single greatest motivator behind the free software/GNU/Linux community. If it weren't for the complete market dominance of Winders and the anti-competitive and illegal behaviour of Microsoft, Linux never would have progressed so far, so quickly.

    In my humble opinion. Which is obviously the undeniable Truth and you're an idiot if you don't totally agree with me. Oh, yeah.
  • Hey, I'm not arguing that all these guys were influential...but sheesh, gimme a break.

    Berner's Lee and Steve Jobs, but not Alan Kay? For cripes sake, Kay invented modern GUI.

    What about Steve Wozniak ? Hello? Steve Jobs wouldn't have been as sucessful if not for Woz!

    Ummm, sheesh. Linus Torvalds, good and well. What about Richard Stallman? What good is a kernel if you can't compile it and don't have OS utilities to use it with?

    Also, there's an area that they didn't cover: modern gaming. While this might not seem like an overly important part of tech: consider this: Games in general have pushed hardware designers to increase the potential and capacity - for example, video cards and sound cards, which have grown so powerful over the last 6 or 7 years that they rival top stuff from 10 years ago, state of the art stuff that cost millions of dollars. Why don't we see any mention of Carmack, Sweeney, Woston or Romero?

  • Put it this way... if Gates suddenly disappeared in 1989, Microsoft would have continued on pretty much as it had. If Linus had disappeared in 1989, Linux (or something like it) quite possibly might never have happened at all.

    Gates is not irrelevant, but his "bringing computers to the masses" was really initiated in 1980's, by 1990 it was a matter of momentum.

  • Yeah, Tim Berners-Lee, he's great and all, but he gave us the text web. Marc Andreesen should head the list if they want to get into who created the web we know and love today.


    eof

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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