Mark Nemenman

Mark Nemenman (Марк Ефимович Неменман, Belarusian: Марк Яўхімавіч Неменман; born 6 November 1936, Minsk, Belarus) is a Soviet computer scientist, notable as a pioneer in systems programming and programming language research. He was one of the main developers of the AKI language (in Russian АКИ - АвтоКод ИНЖЕНЕР - Engineer's Autocode) in 1964, before BASIC became known. He led the development of system software for Minsk-32, the most popular of Minsk family of computers.

He was awarded Lenin Komsomol Prize in 1970, received his Ph.D. in 1975 (scientific advisor - Andrey Ershov), Professor since 1984.

Mark Nemenman authored more than 70 papers and 5 books. He is also the father of a theoretical physicist Ilya Nemenman.

Books

  • Nemenman, Tsagelsky, Matyushevskaya Autocode for engineering problems solving on Minsk 2 Minsk, 1965
  • Nemenman Programming in AKI Minsk, 1972
  • Kushnerev, Nemenman, Tsagelsky Programming for Computer Minsk-32 Moscow, 1973
  • Belokurskaya, Kushnerev, Nemenman Minsk 32 Dispatcher Moscow, 1973
  • Lopato, Nemenman, Pykhtin, Tikmenov Personal-professional Computers Moscow, 1988
  • Belokurskaya, Emelyanchik, Nemenman Personal Computers ES. Abacus Package Moscow, 19
gollark: This RLE thing is great, you can encode long numbers so compactly.
gollark: ```6|67|9|1539460283.94011||1|24.140.54.0|Please post links to your page on page -2|Administrator|||0|0|```
gollark: No, it's not actually anyone important.
gollark: Let me just go check the database.
gollark: Also, you can put in `rz9z9z9`, which is more fun.
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