Mark Davis
Mark Davis may refer to:
Entertainers
- Mark Davis (talk show host), American radio talk show host
- Mark Jonathan Davis (born 1965), American actor/singer and creator of Richard Cheese
- Mark Davis, American bassist and founding member for the band Emmure
- Mark Davis (actor) (born 1965), English adult film actor
- Mark Davis (Canadian musician), Canadian alternative country and indie rock musician
Sports
- Mark Davis (American football) (born 1954/1955), American principal owner of the NFL's Oakland Raiders
- Mark Davis (pitcher) (born 1960), American Major League Baseball player
- Mark Davis (outfielder) (born 1964), American Major League Baseball player
- Mark Davis (basketball, born 1960), former player in the Australian National Basketball League
- Mark Davis (basketball, born 1973), American former National Basketball Association player
- Mark Davis (basketball, born 1963), American former National Basketball Association player
- Mark Davis (snooker player) (born 1972), English snooker player
- Mark Davis (golfer) (born 1964), English golfer
- Mark Davis (English cricketer) (born 1962), English cricketer, played for Somerset and Wiltshire
- Mark Davis (South African cricketer) (born 1971), South African former cricketer, played for Northern Transvaal and then in England for MCC and Sussex
- Mark Davis (fisherman) (born 1963), American bass fisher
- Mark Davis (boxer) (born 1987), American lightweight boxer
- Mark Davis (footballer) (born 1969), English footballer
Other
- Mark Davis (journalist), Australian journalist for Dateline
- Mark A. Davis (born 1966), North Carolina judge
- Mark H. A. Davis (1945-2020), English mathematician
- Mark Davis (Unicode) (born 1952), American co-founder and president of the Unicode Consortium
- Mark Steven Davis (born 1962), U.S. federal judge
- Mark E. Davis (born 1955), American professor of chemical engineering at the California Institute of Technology
- Mark M. Davis (born 1952), American professor of immunology at Stanford University
- Mark S. Davis, American trial lawyer based in Honolulu
gollark: Well, DRAM wasn't used for most of computing history.
gollark: Unfortunately for you, they would be too bad for you to do interesting stuff with for several decades.
gollark: Anyway, electronic computers were invented around 1930.
gollark: Or discrete logic chips.
gollark: Just buy an FPGA?
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