All of the blogs, e-zines, television news and discussion forums are recapping the notable deaths of this past year. Almost all of these seem to be focusing on sports and entertainment celebrities. I thought I'd do a little obit piece for the also-rans... the people who died this year who made a difference that will last longer than the celluloid... most of whom you've never heard of.
Arfa Karim
Randhawa, world’s youngest Microsoft certified professional, died at age 16 in
January from respiratory arrest resulting from an epileptic seizure. This
Pakistani girl was a young computer genius who became the world’s youngest
Microsoft Certified Professional at age 9. Bill Gates was so impressed with her
smarts that he invited her to visit Microsoft’s U.S. headquarters in 2004.
Among her words of wisdom spoken to reporter Todd Bishop: “If you want to do
something big in your life, you must remember that shyness is only the mind. If
you think shy, you act shy. If you think confident you act confident. Therefore
never let shyness conquer your mind.”
F. Sherwood
Rowland, Chemist, died at 84 in March. Rowland was groundbreaking researcher
who was recognized by the 1995 Nobel Prize in chemistry. In 1974 he and his
team discovered that chlorinated fluorocarbons, or CFCs, were damaging the ozone
layer. The findings were met with skepticism by the scientific community. Rowland
did not shrink from speaking out on the potentially catastrophic consequences
of ozone depletion, and he strongly advised politicians and activists to push
for a ban on CFCs. Today's discussions of climate change could use more voices
like his.
Jack Tramiel
died at 83 in April. Tramiel founded Commodore International and in 1982
released the Commodore 64. The little home computer became one of the most
popular of all time, selling nearly 17 million units between 1982 and 1994. Born
1928 to a Jewish family in Lodz, Poland, he survived Auschwitz concentration
camp and in 1947 emigrated to the U.S. Tramiel claimed that after surviving the
Holocaust he could survive just about anything. He purchased chip manufacturer
MOS Technology and Atari Corp. from Time Warner Communications.
Sam Porcello
was the food scientist who died at 76 in May. Known as “Mr. Oreo,” the 34-year
Nabisco veteran held five patents directly related to the Oreo, with the most
famous being for the crème filling. As a member of the Nabisco R&D team he was
really considered an expert on cocoa, but Porcello also created healthy snacks,
including Snackwells products.
Sally Ride, Ph.D.,
Educator, Astronaut and Physicist died July 23, 2012 at the age of 61,
following a 17-month battle with pancreatic cancer. beat out 1,000 other
applicants for a spot in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's
(NASA) astronaut program. She went through the program’s rigorous training
program and got her chance to go into space and the record books in 1983. After
NASA, Sally Ride became the director of the California Space Institute at the
University of California, San Diego, as well as a professor of physics at the
school in 1989. In 2001, she started her own company to create educational
programs and products known as Sally Ride Science to help inspire girls and
young women to pursue their interests in science and math.
Ride received many
honors, including the NASA Space Flight Medal and the NCAA’s Theodore Roosevelt
Award. She was also inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame and the
Astronaut Hall of Fame. Although Sally Ride never publicly stated that she was
a lesbian, her official obituary states she was in a 27-year relationship with
Dr. Tam O’Shaughnessy, a woman. She will always be remembered as a pioneering
astronaut who went where no other woman had gone before.
Robert
Ledley, the inventor of the full-body CT scanner, died at age 86 in July. Ledley’s
first career was as a dentist, but later became a biomedical researcher. He is credited
as a pioneer in the use of computers in the healthcare field. Ledley founded
the nonprofit National Biomedical Research Foundation in 1960 to promote the
use of computers in biomedicine. His work was recognized with introduction into
the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1990 and with a National Medal of
Technology in 1997.
William
Moggridge died in September at age 69. In the late 1970s while with a company
called Grid Systems Moggridge came up with the clamshell design used for laptop
computers. The $8K, 12-pound device, quite portable for its time, gained
prominence through NASA and military use. One of Moggridge’s claims to fame was
coining the term “interaction design,” referring to the common sense idea that
software and hardware should fit people’s needs. “If there’s a simple, easy
principle that binds everything together, it’s probably about starting with the
people.”
Norman “Joe”
Woodland created the bar code (along with Bernard “Bob” Silver) while at Drexel
University. He died in December at age 91. He used his knowledge of Morse Code to come up
with a technology that is used five billion times every day. In 1992, Woodland
received the National Medal of Technology, and in a more modern tribute to
Woodland and Silver’s work, Google introduced a Google Doodle atop its search
page in 2009 recognizing the 57th anniversary of the patent.
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3 Comments:
REAL PEOPLE!
Thanks, and I actually used Moggridge's Grid computers for a number of years (and they were DAMN HEAVY)!!!
Thanks. And thanks for all your work this year. I hope you have the energy to continue in '13.
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