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Brandon Vogel

Brandon Vogel is a DevSecOps and infrastructure engineering leader with more than 30 years of experience supporting mission-critical systems across scientific research, national security, and government operations. His career includes major technical roles at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, and the Federal Public Defender’s Office, where he guided modernization efforts in highly secured and complex computing environments.

Bob Frankston

Bob Frankston is a pioneering software engineer best known as the co-creator of VisiCalc, the first electronic spreadsheet. Released in 1979, VisiCalc transformed personal computing from a hobbyist pursuit into an essential business tool and is widely regarded as the application that ignited the PC revolution.

James W. Cortada

James W. Cortada is a historian of information technology and a former IBM executive whose scholarship has shaped understanding of the digital revolution. He is a Senior Research Fellow at the Charles Babbage Institute at the University of Minnesota, where his work focuses on the history of computing, business innovation, and the evolution of digital-era management practices.

Peter J. Denning

Peter J. Denning is a leading computer scientist, educator, and author whose work spans operating systems, performance analysis, and the foundations of computing as a discipline. He is a Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California, where he chairs the Computer Science Department and directs the Cebrowski Institute for Information Innovation.

Esther Dyson

Esther Dyson is an investor, journalist, author, and philanthropist whose career has spanned the formative decades of the digital age. After studying economics at Harvard University, where she wrote for The Harvard Crimson, she began her professional life at Forbes, quickly rising from fact-checker to reporter. She later moved into Wall Street analysis, covering technology and emerging companies, before taking on a more entrepreneurial role in the tech industry.

George Dyson

George Dyson is a historian of science and technology whose writings explore the origins of digital computing, the evolution of intelligence, and the intersection of human and machine history. He is widely known for Turing’s Cathedral, his influential account of the mathematicians and engineers who built some of the first electronic computers at the Institute for Advanced Study.

Gerald Estrin

Gerald Estrin was a computer scientist and professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), known for his influential work in computer architecture and reconfigurable computing. At UCLA he led the Machine Instruction Set Computer (MISC) and later the “reconfigurable processor” projects, both of which explored modular architectures and the idea that computer hardware could dynamically adapt itself to the needs of software—concepts that anticipated later developments in parallel processing and programmable hardware.

David Farber

David J. Farber (1934–2026) was a renowned computer scientist whose work influenced distributed systems, early networking, and Internet policy. He served as Professor Emeritus at Carnegie Mellon University, where he helped build one of the nation's leading computer science departments and conducted foundational research in distributed computing, email systems, and communications protocols. Farber passed away on February 7, 2026, in Tokyo, Japan, at the age of 91.

Bruce Gilchrist

Bruce Gilchrist was a computing pioneer whose work helped establish the role of university computing centers as engines of research and innovation. As director of the Columbia University Computer Center, he oversaw the expansion of large-scale computing resources for scientific, engineering, and administrative use during the early mainframe era.

Martin Goetz

Martin A. Goetz was a software industry pioneer best known for receiving the first U.S. patent issued for computer software. In 1968 he was granted a patent for a data-sorting algorithm developed at Applied Data Research (ADR), establishing a landmark precedent that helped legitimize software as intellectual property and as a product independent of hardware manufacturing.

Jay Goldberg

Jay Goldberg was a venture capitalist and entrepreneur who co-founded Hudson Ventures, a New-York–based venture fund investing in early-stage information technology companies. Under his leadership as managing partner, the firm supported startups in software, communications, security, and Internet infrastructure during key periods of industry expansion.

Bernard Goldstein

Bernard Goldstein was an investment banker and advisor who founded Broadview Associates, one of the first firms to specialize exclusively in mergers, acquisitions, and corporate finance for technology companies. Long before technology investment banking became its own industry category, Goldstein recognized that high-growth computing and electronics companies required specialized financial expertise.

Ann Hardy

Ann Hardy was a pioneering computer scientist whose work in operating systems and time-sharing contributed to some of the earliest commercial multi-user computing environments. At Tymshare, she served as a developer and system architect for the Tymshare time-sharing service, one of the first broadly available commercial systems that allowed multiple remote users to access computing resources interactively.

Albert S. Hoagland

Albert S. Hoagland was a magnetic-recording and storage-systems pioneer whose research helped advance the performance and reliability of hard-disk and tape-storage technologies. He spent much of his early career at IBM, contributing to projects involving magnetic-recording physics, head and media design, and the engineering of high-capacity disk files during formative decades of the storage industry.

Thomas P. Hughes

Thomas P. Hughes was one of the most influential historians of technology of the 20th century. As a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, he helped establish the academic study of large-scale technological systems—such as electric power networks, telecommunications, industrial production systems, and computing—as a central discipline within the history of science and engineering.

Gopal K. Kapur

Gopal K. Kapur is an expert in project management for information systems and the founder and president of the Center for Project Management. He is recognized for developing practical frameworks for managing complex IT initiatives and aligning technology projects with organizational strategy.

Randy H. Katz

Randy H. Katz is a pioneering computer scientist whose work has profoundly influenced modern storage systems, high-performance computing and engineering education. He holds an A.B. from Cornell University (1976) and an M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley (1978, 1980).

Bruce W. McConnell

Bruce W. McConnell is a global cybersecurity and information-policy leader whose career spans government, international organizations, and private-sector advisory work. He is CEO of McConnell International, LLC, a consulting firm specializing in cybersecurity strategy, Internet governance, and global public policy.

Susan Nycum

Susan Nycum is a pioneering technology attorney whose work helped establish computer law—covering software licensing, data rights, privacy, and emerging digital issues—as a recognized legal specialty. She is a partner at TechDisputes.com, where she focuses on technology disputes, expert testimony, and intellectual-property matters in computing and digital systems.

William Hugh Murray

William Hugh Murray is a veteran of the information security field with decades of experience in secure computing practices, network protection, and applied cybersecurity. His career includes long-standing affiliations with Verizon Business and the Naval Postgraduate School, where he contributed to the development of practical, standards-driven approaches to enterprise technology security.

Anthony G. Oettinger

Anthony G. Oettinger was a Harvard professor and influential thinker on information policy, communications, and the social impact of computing. At Harvard University, he held positions in applied mathematics and later founded the Program on Information Resources Policy, an interdisciplinary center examining how information systems affect national policy, governance, and society.

Donn B. Parker

Donn B. Parker was one of the earliest and most influential researchers in computer security, cybercrime, and information ethics. At SRI International, he served as a senior information-security researcher and consultant, helping establish foundational principles for evaluating risks and protecting information systems.

James R. Porter

James R. Porter was a leading market analyst and consultant in the semiconductor and storage industries. As founder and managing director of Porter Capital Partners, he provided strategic market analysis, forecasting, and competitive assessments to technology companies, investors, and industry groups.

Montgomery Phister, Jr.

Montgomery Phister, Jr. was a respected author, lecturer, and computer-industry executive whose books and consulting work helped clarify the architecture and economics of digital systems. His early work at Scientific Data Systems (SDS) and later Xerox Data Systems placed him at the center of developments in minicomputers and scientific computing during the 1960s and 1970s.

Robert M. Price

Robert M. Price was a technology executive and strategist known for his leadership at Control Data Corporation (CDC) during a period of significant innovation in computing and education technology. As President and Chief Operating Officer of CDC, he helped guide the company’s transition from its origins in high-performance computing toward diversified information services, training systems, and early enterprise solutions.

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