"Computing.... There I was!"

David Windmueller - from peek and poke, to operating nuclear reactors, to NASA and Google

1 h 0 min · 24 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio David Windmueller - from peek and poke, to operating nuclear reactors, to NASA and Google

Descripción

David Windmueller had an unusually varied career. Although he started playing with computers in elementary school, he started his working life as operator of nuclear reactors in the US Navy. Once he became a software engineer he worked at NASA, some startups and eventually landed at Google. Today he teaches computer science and physics to high school students. If you have any questions or suggestions please email the host: richieb@gmail.com

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9 episodios

episode Steven Fortune - researcher at IBM and Bell Labs. and then software engineer at Google. artwork

Steven Fortune - researcher at IBM and Bell Labs. and then software engineer at Google.

Steven Fortune began programming while still in High School - in FORTRAN on punch cards. One of his ambitious projects was a program to play chess (in batch mode!). After obtaining his Ph.D., he went to work at IBM Research Labs in Yorktown Heights. Later, he moved on to Bell Labs research, where he worked in the group that included the creators of UNIX. While working on graph algorithms he developed what is now called Fortune's algorithm [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortune%27s_algorithm]. After a long career at Bell Labs, Steve was hired at Google where he spent his time working on algorithms to improve search results. He retired from Google in 2022. If you have any questions or suggestions please email the host: richieb@gmail.com

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episode Barbara Gilman - from early system engineer at IBM to a career as independent consultant. artwork

Barbara Gilman - from early system engineer at IBM to a career as independent consultant.

Barbara Gilman started her career as a Systems Engineer at IBM in 1962. She first wired control panels on IBM accounting machines, such as the 407 [https://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/407.html], then moved on to programming 1401 computers. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_1401] She first coded in machine language, then used Autocoder and others, including Assembly language on the IBM 360/370. After leaving IBM, Barbara worked as an independent software developer, working on many small and mid-range systems, from PCs to 1440s to AS400s, for a wide range of companies. She ended her career working for The Coca-Cola Company. If you have any questions or suggestions please email the host: richieb@gmail.com

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