Andrew Kirmse

Andrew Kirmse is an American computer programmer. He was a co-creator of Meridian 59, the first 3D massively-multiplayer online game.[1] While an engineer at Google, he co-created Google Now, a predictive search engine.[2]

Andrew Kirmse
NationalityAmerican
Alma materMassachusetts Institute of Technology
OccupationVideo game developer (former)
Mobile software
Known forCreator of Meridian 59
Creator of Google Now
TitleDistinguished engineer

Video games

Andrew and his brother Chris developed the code for Meridian 59 in their parents' basement while they were in college.[3] Meridian was the first online game to include 3D graphics. After a beta period, it was published by The 3DO Company in 1996, where it ran until 2000. Meridian's code was open-sourced in 2012,[4] and it continues to run for free today.

While at LucasArts, Andrew served as graphics programmer on the PlayStation 2 game Star Wars: Starfighter.[5]

Andrew contributed to the first four volumes of the Game Programming Gems series of books about video game development. He was the editor of Game Programming Gems 4.[6]

Google

Andrew began working at Google in 2003, where he managed the Google Earth team.[7] He later started and led Google Now,[8] which was named Innovation of the Year by Popular Science in 2012,[9] and won the Grand Prize at the 2013 User Experience Awards.[10] He gave an invited talk on Google Now at the 2014 WWW Conference.[11]

gollark: The stack thing can be done without forcing programs to adapt, like MBS and PotatOS do.
gollark: I'm not sure this is better. It looks like it would involve more code whenever you use it.
gollark: I dropped it after some weird bugginess.
gollark: Me, if I get really bored and decide to work on my extreme serialization thing again.
gollark: I mean, you can, with extreme hackery, serialize all the local variables, and by patching `coroutine.create` you can get the function.

References

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