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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dan_IngallsDan Ingalls - Wikipedia

    Daniel Henry Holmes Ingalls Jr. (born 1944) is a pioneer of object-oriented computer programming and the principal architect, designer and implementer of five generations of Smalltalk environments. He designed the bytecoded virtual machine that made Smalltalk practical in 1976.

  2. www.computerhistory.org › profile › dan-ingalls-2Dan Ingalls - CHM

    Hace 3 días · Daniel Henry Holmes Ingalls Jr. is an American computer scientist who has made pioneering innovations in object-oriented programming and computer graphics. He was born in 1944 in Washington DC, where his Sanskrit scholar father had been drafted to the OSS for code breaking work during World War II.

  3. After his retirement, Ingalls worked with his son, computer scientist Daniel H. H. Ingalls Jr., Harvard ‘66, on a computer-assisted analysis of the literary technique of the Mahabharata, and their first findings were published in 1985 in the Journal of South Asian Literature.

  4. 22 de jul. de 1999 · Professor Ingalls, an expert on Sanskrit literature and Indian history and philosophy, retired as the Wales Professor of Sanskrit in 1983 after 35 years as a professor at Harvard.

  5. 1944. (b.) - ? Bio/Description. Daniel Henry Holmes Ingalls, Jr. is a pioneer of object-oriented computer programming and the principal architect, designer and implementor of five generations of Smalltalk environments. He designed the bytecoded virtual machine that made Smalltalk practical in 1976.

  6. POLLOCK: Daniel Henry Holmes Ingalls 389 been for many of his students the single most impor-tant teacher and inspiration in their lives. The desir-ability of a totalizing approach to traditional India evinced in his research was brought into the classroom as well, where, in his alternating courses in philosophy

  7. Daniel H. H. Ingalls Jr., Harvard ‘66, on a computer-assisted analysis of the literary technique of the Mahabharata, and their first findings were published in 1985 in the Journal of South Asian Literature. During these years, Ingalls was the editor of the Harvard Oriental Series (H.O.S. Volumes