Alan Kay Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Alan Kay is an American computer scientist. He joined Xerox Corporation's Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) in 1970. In the seventies he was one of the key members there to develop prototypes of networked workstations using the programming language Smalltalk. These inventions were later commercialized by Apple with the Apple Macintosh. Alan Kay is one of the fathers of the idea of object-oriented programming, along with some colleagues at PARC and predecessors at the Norwegian Computing Centre. He is the conceiver of the Dynabook concept which defined the basics of the laptop computer and the tablet computer and he is also considered by some as the architect of the modern windowing GUI. A recent development is the open source Squeak dynamic media software.After 10 years at Xerox PARC, Kay was Atari's chief scientist for three years. Starting in 1984, Kay was a Fellow at Apple Computer. He then joined Walt Disney Imagineering as a Disney Fellow, currently he is a Senior Fellow at HP and the president of the Viewpoints Research Institute.
Alan is a professor at UCLA.
In 2004 Alan Kay received:
The ACM Turing Award for his work on object oriented programming.
The Kyoto Prize.
The Charles Stark Draper Prize along with Butler W. Lampson, Robert W. Taylor and Charles P. Thacker
Kay has a Bachelor's degree in Mathematics and Molecular Biology from the University of Colorado, and a Master's degree and Ph.D. from the University of Utah.
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