- Wesley A. Clark
Wesley Allison Clark (born 1927) is a
computer scientist and one of the main participants, along withCharles Molnar , in the creation of theLINC laboratory computer, which was the firstmini-computer and shares with a number of other computers (such as thePDP-1 ) the claim to be the inspiration for thepersonal computer .Clark was born in
New Haven, Connecticut and grew up in northern California. He graduated from theUniversity of California, Berkeley in 1947, and received anelectrical engineering degree fromMIT in 1955. Clark worked forWashington University from 1964–72, and as a consultant thereafter. He founded Clark, Rockoff, and Associates inBrooklyn, New York , with his wife, Maxine Rockoff. His oldest son, Douglas, is a professor of computer science atPrinceton University .The
New York Times series on the history of the personal computer had this to say in an article onAugust 19 ,2001 "How the Computer Became Personal":In the pantheon of personal computing, the LINC, in a sense, came first—more than a decade before Ed Roberts made PC's affordable for ordinary people. Work started on the Linc, the brainchild of the M.I.T. physicist Wesley A. Clark, in May 1961, and the machine was used for the first time at the
National Institute of Mental Health inBethesda, MD , the next year to analyze a cat's neural responses.Each Linc had a tiny screen and keyboard and comprised four metal modules, which together were about as big as two television sets, set side by side and tilted back slightly. The machine, a 12-bit computer, included a one-half megahertz processor. Lincs sold for about $43,000—a bargain at the time—and were ultimately made commercially by Digital Equipment, the first minicomputer company. Fifty Lincs of the original design were built.
Clark had a small but key role in the planning for the
ARPANET (the predecessor to theInternet ). He suggested toLarry Roberts the idea of using separate smallcomputer s (later namedInterface Message Processor s) as a way of standardizing the network interface and reducing load on the local computers.In 1981 Clark received the
Eckert-Mauchly Award for his work on computer architecture. He was elected to theNational Academy of Engineering in 1999.References
* [http://www.smartcomputing.com/editorial/dictionary/detail.asp?guid=&searchtype=1&DicID=19576&RefType=Encyclopedia Wesley Clark article] in "Smart Computing Encyclopedia"
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