Deceased

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

William T. “Bill” Coleman III (1947–2020) was a Silicon Valley software visionary and entrepreneur whose companies helped define enterprise infrastructure in the client-server and Internet eras. He co-founded BEA Systems in 1995 and served as its chairman and chief executive officer as the company’s middleware and application-server products became central components in large-scale enterprise systems.

James C. Castle (d. November 11, 2015) was a technology executive and board director whose career has spanned information systems, financial services, and transaction-processing industries. He is President and Chief Executive Officer of Castle Information Technologies, an information-technology and board-of-directors consulting firm that advises companies on large-scale systems strategy and governance.

John F. Carlson (1938–2006) was an American business executive best known for leading supercomputer manufacturer Cray Research Inc. during a pivotal period in its history. Born in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, he studied at Saint Mary’s University in Winona, Minnesota, and began his career as a certified public accountant with Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co. in 1964.

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