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Bell, Gordon
Growing biography, with links to related topics. [Wikipedia]
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
C. Gordon Bell (born August 19, 1934) is a
and manager. An early employee of
(DEC) 1960–1966, Bell designed several of their
machines and later became Vice President of Engineering 1972-1983, overseeing the development of the
. Bell's later career
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Yearly $5,000 prize awarded for gains in high-performance computing, money donated by Bell, award tracks progress over time of parallel computing in applications; 3 categories: Peak Performance, Price/Performance, Special.
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SC2000 GORDON BELL AWARDS
Post-conference update: please see the
for a complete list of all awards presented at SC2000.
The Gordon Bell Prizes are awarded each year to recognize outstanding
achievement in high-performance computing. The $5000 prize money is donated
high-performance and parallel
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Interview with C. Gordon Bell; he sees the future, and wants the past stored and memorialized. ACM: Ubiquity.
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CyberAll: Everywhere and Forever
C. Gordon Bell has been a leader in information technology for three
decades, and has been senior research consultant at Microsoft since 1995. He
was an assistant director for computing at the National Science Foundation
from 1986 to 1988, and vice president for
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Presentation with summary, audio file MP3 download, PowerPoint file, link to readings. [IT Conversations]
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Within five years, our personal computers will be able to store everything we read, write, hear, and many of the images we see including a bit of video. Vannevar Bush outlined such a system in his famous 1945 Memex article. Since 2000 a team at Microsoft has been working on MyLifeBits to hold all cyberizable items from both personal and profession lives including articles, books, email and written correspondence, photos, telephone calls, video files, web pages visited. They are extending the reach to capture psychological data through wearable devices e.g. the SenseCam from Microsoft's Cambridge Lab, and BodyMedia.While such a system has implications for future computing devices and their users, these systems will only exist if we can effectively utilize the vast personal stores. [Audio from Accelerating Change 2004 by IT Conversations]
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MyLifeBits and the Memex Vision
45 minutes, 20.6mb, recorded 2004-11-06
Full title: "MyLifeBits: The Memex Vision and Some Implications of Storing Everything Personal"
Within five years, our personal computers
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