15 comments

  • chairmansteve 12 hours ago

    D. Richard Hipp is up there for me.

    I love the minimalism of his programs, SQLLite and Fossil. Also involved in Tcl, my favourite language.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D._Richard_Hipp

  • dlcarrier 11 hours ago

    That's far too subjective of a question to have a specific answer, but obviously it's Melvin Kaye: http://www.catb.org/jargon/html/story-of-mel.html

  • jerhewet 9 hours ago
  • rstagi 12 hours ago

    "best" is a relative term, but in terms of technology we all use every day I would say either Linus Torvalds or Jeff Dean are up there among the best for sure

    • xqb64 12 hours ago

      Sort of, the one who, when left stranded on a desert island, would make a CPU out of sand, write software for it, including the entire TCP/IP stack, and email someone to come get them.

  • smallduck 7 hours ago

    Nasir Gebelli. Wrote Apple 2 games by dictating bytes typed into the mini-assembler, went on to write/co-design the early Final Fantasy titles. Legend.

  • jleyank 12 hours ago

    You'd have to come up with the criteria for "best" but as an old hacker, "from MIT or Bell Labs" comes to mind as where to look. Maybe some of their spinoffs, but those sites did amazing things with basically nothing.

    • xqb64 12 hours ago

      Yeah. Andy Tanenbaum described studying at MIT as "drinking from a fire hose". Do we have someone who both got their degree from MIT and worked at Bell Labs? That'd be an interesting combo.

  • 12 hours ago
    [deleted]
  • genxy 11 hours ago

    You will never know, for all they do is delete and refactor.

  • LocalH 10 hours ago

    Any of the top coders from the major demoscenes.

  • __patchbit__ 12 hours ago

    RMS

    • boho_derogatory 8 hours ago

      In case you weren't being ironic, his C code was journeyman-like in the 80s and positively atrocious by modern standards.

    • jr_isidore 11 hours ago

      [dead]

  • bdangubic 12 hours ago

    Mike Evanston