The Programming and Management Blog » Most Influential Programmers Results
Nick Halstead recently took a month-long poll over at his blog recently of what people consider the most influential programmers, and below is the result:
1st – Linus Torvalds
2nd – Alan turing
3rd – Dennis Ritchie
4th – Donald Knuth
5th – Rasmus Lerdorf
6th – John Carmack
7th – Bill Gates
8th – Richard Stallman
9th – Tim Berners-Lee
10th – Bjarne Stroustrup
I can’t say I think this list makes any sense at all. Firstly, while Linus is definitely influential, I think it’s a stretch to say he’s the most influential of all time. Rasmus Lerdorf, similarly created something interesting, but among the most influential of all time? Bill Gates’ influence is due more to his technical strategy and business acumen, not his programming.
His own top ten list is here:
He cheated with all the “&”s. Of course, mine would look much different, I think. Remember – this is for all time. The criteria must be something other than simple fame, which seems to be the impetus for the poll-driven list. It also should be something other than riches. Influence that sprang from work as a programmer is the criteria. It might should even be two lists: influence over the world in general (or over multiple industries), and influence in the programming and software industry. Perhaps, put simply, the idea is people who have significantly changed the way we think or do things.
Anyway, here is my list. It is unorderd, as I just don’t know how I could possibly rank the individuals. They are from different times which posed different problems, had influence in different ways which has meant different things in modern times. One might be able to do very lose rankings, but a 1-10 ranking I think isn’t very sensible.
Have a look at Wikipedia to see info about more programmers.
Tags: programming