Dan Bricklin
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Daniel S. Bricklin (born 16 July 1951) is the co-creator, with Bob Frankston, of the VisiCalc spreadsheet program. He also founded Software Garden, Inc., of which he is currently president, and Trellix Corporation.
Bricklin was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA, where he attended Akiba Hebrew Academy during his High School years. He received his B.S. in electrical engineering/computer science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he was a resident of Bexley Hall, and his MBA from Harvard University in 1979.
Also in 1979, Bricklin and Frankston founded Software Arts, Inc., and began selling VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet program available for personal computers. He was given a Grace Murray Hopper Award in 1981 for VisiCalc.
Bricklin was chairman of Software Arts until 1985, when he left to found Software Garden. He was the president of the company until he co-founded Slate Corporation in 1990. Slate closed in 1994 and so Bricklin returned to Software Garden. In 1994 he was also inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.
In 1995 Bricklin founded Trellix Corporation. Trellix was bought by Interland now Web.com, in 2003, and Bricklin became Interland's chief technology officer.
He introduced the term "friend-to-friend networking" on August 11, 2000. bricklin.com
In 2003, Bricklin was given the Wharton Infosys Business Transformation Award for being a technology change leader. He was recognized for having used information technology in an industry-transforming way.
Bricklin is currently president of Software Garden, a small company which develops and markets software tools he creates (most notably "Dan Bricklin's Demo Program"), as well as providing speaking and consulting services.
He is also developing wikiCalc, a collaborative, basic spreadsheet running on the Web.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- DanBricklin.com
- Trellix
- Software Garden
- Dan Bricklin at the Internet Movie Database
- I'm working on a new product called wikiCalc, from Dan Bricklin's weblog on November 9, 2005, introducing wikiCalc
- This page has a link to Dan's interview conducted by Robert Cringely
- Web.com, formerly Interland
Categories: 1951 births | Living people | Computer pioneers | Electrical engineers | American entrepreneurs | Computer programmers | People from Philadelphia | Grace Murray Hopper Award laureates | Wharton Infosys Business Transformation Award winners | Fellows of the ACM | United States computer specialist stubs