L Peter Deutsch
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L Peter Deutsch or Peter Deutsch (born Laurence Peter Deutsch, August 7, 1946 in Boston, Massachusetts) is the founder of Aladdin Enterprises and creator of Ghostscript, a free software PostScript and PDF interpreter.
Deutsch's other work includes the definitive Smalltalk implementation that, among other innovations, inspired Java just-in-time technology 15 or-so years later[citation needed].
He also wrote the PDP-1 Lisp 1.5 implementation, Basic PDP-1 LISP, "while still in short pants" and finished it in 1963, when he was 17 years old.[1]
He is also the author of a number of RFCs, the The Eight Fallacies of Distributed Computing, and originated the Deutsch limit adage about visual programming languages.
Deutsch received a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of California, Berkeley in 1973,[2] and has previously worked at Xerox PARC and Sun Microsystems. In 1994 he was inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.
Deutsch changed his legal first name from "Laurence" to "L" on September 12, 2007.[3] His published work and other public references before that time generally use the name L. Peter Deutsch (with a dot after the L).
In January 2009, after auditing undergraduate Music courses at Stanford University, he entered the postgraduate Music program at California State University, East Bay, and was awarded a M.A. in March 2011. As of mid-2011, he has had six compositions performed on public concerts, and now generally identifies himself as a composer rather than a software developer.
References
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External links
- L. Peter Deutsch's PIVOT program verification system (thesis and source code
- RFCs authored or co-authored by L. Peter Deutsch: RFC 190, RFC 446, RFC 550, RFC 567, RFC 606, RFC 1950, RFC 1951 and RFC 1952
- L. Peter Deutsch in conversation with Stig Hackvän at the Wayback Machine (archived October 13, 2004)
- L. Peter Deutsch's web page related to music, including link to scores and MIDI files
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- ↑ The LISP Implementation for the PDP-1 Computer, L. Peter Deutsch and Edmund C Berkeley, March 1964
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- Pages with reference errors
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- Articles with unsourced statements from January 2012
- 1946 births
- Free software programmers
- Fellows of the Association for Computing Machinery
- University of California, Berkeley alumni
- Living people
- American computer specialist stubs