- Frederic C. Billingsley
Frederic Crockett Billingsley (23 July 1921 – 31 May 2002) was an American engineer, who spent most of his career developing techniques for
digital image processing in support of American space probes to the moon, to Mars, and to other planets.Billingsley published two papers in 1965 using the word "
pixel ", [Richard F. Lyon, "A Brief History of 'Pixel'," "SPIE Electronic Imaging Conference Digital Photography II", SPIE vol. EI 6069, 2006.] and may have been the first to publish that neologism for "picture element".He was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, and died in Great Falls, Montana.
Image processing contributions
Billingsley was one of the pioneers of
digital image processing mentioned in "THE BEST OF NASA'S SPINOFFS," [cite web | url = http://www1.jsc.nasa.gov/er/seh/spinoff.html | title = THE BEST OF NASA'S SPINOFFS | publisher = NASA Johnson Space Center] which says:There also was a need for hardware to record both analog video and digital images on film. No suitable commercial hardware existed, so JPL's Fred Billingsley designed a system called the Video Film Converter (VFC). Built for JPL by Link General Precision, the VFC was used in the 1970s for image playback of the striking pictures retumed by the planetary missions of the unmanned Mariner spacecraft.
TheJPL document "Overview of VICAR" [cite web | url = http://www-mipl.jpl.nasa.gov/PAG/public/vug/vug3.html | title = Overview of VICAR | publisher = NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory] shows that Billingsley did software as well as hardware:The VICAR image processing language was defined by JPL employees Stan Bressler, Howard Frieden and Fred Billingsley, and implemented in 1966 at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory to process image data produced by the planetary exploration program.
References
External links
* [http://www.computerhistory.org/events/index.php?id=1109183291 Pixel History talk] dedicated to Fred Billingsley
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