Bill Paxton (computer scientist)

William Paxton is a computer scientist at the University of California.[1] He is one of the founders of Adobe Systems and became one of the original designers and implementors of the PostScript page description language.

Stanford

Paxton received his PhD from Stanford in 1977. He worked with Doug Engelbart at the Stanford Research Institute where the group would build the Online System (NLS) and was there during "The Mother of All Demos".

Xerox PARC

After leaving Stanford, Paxton would join the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) where they were working on emerging technologies, including Ethernet, networked personal computers, bitmap displays, graphical user-interfaces, and laser printers. [2]

Adobe

Paxton joined Adobe in 1983. He built the Type 1 font algorithms for PDF. Paxton and his team received the ACM Software System Award in 1989[3] for the design of the PostScript language and implementation.

In 1990 Paxton retired from Adobe Systems and became an unofficial scholar in residence at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics (KITP) at the University of Santa Barbara, where he started working on the physics of stellar evolution. He is responsible for the EZ stellar evolution program and has worked on the redesign of the Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA)[4] system.[5]


gollark: I dislike this.
gollark: You can do```pythonprint("apioform", "memetic beeoid")```
gollark: Python doesn't do this though.
gollark: Lua doesn't use semicolons or newlines and is mostly unambiguous.
gollark: It does both in separate coroutines if there's an ambiguity.

References

  1. "Bill Paxton | KITP". www.kitp.ucsb.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-14.
  2. https://www.kitp.ucsb.edu/paxton
  3. ACM Software System Award, http://awards.acm.org/software-system/award-winners
  4. http://mesa.sourceforge.net/
  5. Bill Paxton, MESA Discussion (video), October 11, 2011. http://online.kitp.ucsb.edu/online/asteroseismo11/paxton/


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.