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Home > Danny Hillis


 

1 Synopsis

W. Daniel Hillis [Danny] (born September 25, 1956, Baltimore, Maryland) is an American computer scientist. Hillis is interested in unconventional theoretical computers such as parallel computers, which might be far more powerful than conventional ones.

Danny Hillis built a computer that played tic-tac-toe made of tinkertoys while a student at MIT. This accomplishment was mentioned obliquely in K. Eric Drexler's book Engines of Creation. Hillis is a member of the Global Business Network and founded Thinking Machines which developed the Connection Machine; a computertower of a personal computer. A computer is a device for making calculations or controlling operations that are expressible in numerical or logical terms. While factually accurate, this definition and those found in other dictionaries are so broad that th that employs parallel distributed processing (PDP). Hillis is also the cofounder, with Stewart BrandStewart Brand (born December 14, 1938 in Rockford, Illinois) is an author, editor, and creator of The Whole Earth Catalog and pioneering online community The WELL. During Brand's childhood, his father worried that school was not stimulating Stewart to ind, of the Long Now FoundationFoundation The Long Now Foundation was established in 1996. It is a private organization that has set itself a two-fold mission of educating the general public of their belief that the human race needs a long-term perspective of its future to enhance its. He recently wrote The Pattern on the Stone: The Simple Ideas That Make Computers Work (Basic Books, 19981998 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar), and was designated the International Year of the Ocean''. Events January January 1998 A massive ice storm, caused by El Nino, strikes New England, southern Ontario and Quebec, resulting BooksEnthsiast.com).

2 Biography

modified from a GFDL bio by Ben Goertzel, published in the Frankfurter Allgemeine in 2001

Hillis's achievements and insights defy simple summary. In several ways, Hillis cuts a unique figure in the turn-of-the-millenium techno-visionary pantheon. He waxes philosophical with the best of them, holding forth eloquently about transhumanism and the end of the human race and the whole shebang. He’s building a clock intended to last ten thousand years (via the Long Now FoundationFoundation The Long Now Foundation was established in 1996. It is a private organization that has set itself a two-fold mission of educating the general public of their belief that the human race needs a long-term perspective of its future to enhance its). And yet he’s neck deep in practical work; having, a few years back, resigned a plum job as a Disney exec to start a new company providing technology and consulting to the entertainment industry.

Hillis's biggest stab at fame and fortune was Thinking Machines Inc., a firm that lasted 11 years, created the world’s best parallel computing hardware, yet failed to either create a thinking computer program or make Hillis fabulously wealthy. Hillis seems relatively unruffled by the whole crazy rollercoaster ride. His visionary prognostications lack the alarmism of Bill JoyWilliam N. Joy (born 1954), commonly known as Bill Joy co-founded Sun Microsystems in 1982 along with Vinod Khosla, Scott McNealy and Andy Bechtolsheim, and served as chief scientist at the company until 2003. Joy received his B. in Electrical Engineering or Jaron Lanier, and also avoid the starry-eyed enthusiasm of Ray Kurzweil. He comes across, in person and in his writings, as a mild-mannered, curious and creative guy. Although he now talks tough about business like any other seasoned exec, in many ways he’s still an MIT hacker at heart, delighted with the task of building the next cool gadget or intricate algorithm, and looking forward to the gadgets and algorithms of the next millennia in a remarkably matter-of-fact way.



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