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Bob Frankston

Adapted from Wikipedia ยท Discoverer experience

Portrait of Bob Frankston taken in 2012.

Robert M. Frankston was born on June 14, 1949. He is an American software engineer and businessman. Together with Dan Bricklin, he created a company called Software Arts. They also developed a very important program called VisiCalc. This program was sold by a company named VisiCorp. VisiCalc was one of the first spreadsheets, which helped people organize and calculate numbers on computers easily.

Early life and education

Bob Frankston was born and grew up in Brooklyn, New York. He finished high school at Stuyvesant High School in New York City in 1966. He went to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and got a degree in computer science and mathematics, and later a Master of Engineering degree in computer science from the same school.

Career

Bob Frankston worked with Dan Bricklin and later joined companies like Lotus Development Corporation and Microsoft. He spoke out about how some companies and rules slow down changes to the Internet, especially for better phone and internet services. He even made up a new word, "Regulatorium," to explain how these groups work together to stop new ideas.

Awards and recognition

Bob Frankston received many awards for his work. In 1994, he became a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery for creating VisiCalc, which helped change how people used computers. He also received the MIT William L. Stewart Award for helping start the Student Information Processing Board. In 1985, he won the Association for Computing Machinery Software System Award. Other awards include the MIT LCS Industrial Achievement Award, the Washington Award from the Western Society of Engineers in 2001 (shared with Dan Bricklin), and in 2004, he was made a Fellow of the Computer History Museum for making personal computers more useful with VisiCalc.

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