C. Gordon Bell, a know-how visionary whose pc designs for Digital Equipment Corporation fueled the emergence of the minicomputer trade within the Sixties, died on Friday at his residence in Coronado, Calif. He was 89.
The trigger was pneumonia, his household mentioned in an announcement.
Called the “Frank Lloyd Wright of computer systems” by Datamation journal, Mr. Bell was the grasp architect within the effort to create smaller, reasonably priced, interactive computer systems that could possibly be clustered right into a community. A virtuoso at pc structure, he constructed the primary time-sharing pc and championed efforts to construct the Ethernet. He was amongst a handful of influential engineers whose designs shaped the very important bridge between the room-size fashions of the mainframe period and the appearance of the private pc.
After stints at a number of different startup ventures, he turned the pinnacle of the National Science Foundation’s computer systems and knowledge science and engineering group, the place he directed the trouble to hyperlink the world’s supercomputers right into a high-speed community that led on to the event of the trendy web. He later joined Microsoft’s nascent analysis lab, the place he remained for about 20 years earlier than being named researcher emeritus.
In 1991, he was awarded the National Medal of Technology and Innovation.
“His principal contribution was his imaginative and prescient of the longer term,” mentioned David Cutler, a senior technical fellow on the Microsoft Research Lab and a number one software program engineer, who labored with Mr. Bell at each Digital and Microsoft. “He at all times had a imaginative and prescient of the place computing was going to go. He helped make computing rather more widespread and extra private.”
At a time when pc corporations like IBM have been promoting multimillion-dollar mainframe computer systems, Digital Equipment Corporation, which was based and run by Kenneth Olsen, geared toward introducing smaller, highly effective machines that could possibly be bought for a fraction of that price. Hired from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology campus in 1960 as the corporate’s second pc engineer, Mr. Bell designed all its early entrants into what was then known as the minicomputer market.
The PDP-8, a 12-bit pc launched in 1965 with an $18,000 price ticket, was thought-about the primary profitable minicomputer in the marketplace. More vital, Digital Equipment Corporation’s minicomputers have been bought to scientists, engineers and different customers who interacted immediately with the machines in an period when company computer systems have been off limits to such customers, housed in glass-walled knowledge facilities below the watchful eye of specialists.
“All the D.E.C. machines have been interactive, and we believed in having individuals discuss on to computer systems,” Mr. Bell mentioned in a 1985 interview with Computerworld, an trade publication. In this manner, Mr. Bell presaged the approaching private pc revolution.
Under the usually autocratic Mr. Olsen, the corporate was an engineering-oriented surroundings during which product strains drove the enterprise, consensus emerged after loud and infrequently caustic debate, and a matrixlike construction blurred the strains of administration. This managed chaos turned a supply of super stress for Mr. Bell; he typically butted heads with Mr. Olsen, who was identified for conserving shut tabs on the work of his engineers, a lot to Mr. Bell’s chagrin.
Undone by the strain, Mr. Bell took what turned a six-year sabbatical to show at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, however he returned to the corporate as vp of engineering in 1972. Reinvigorated and brimming with new concepts, he oversaw the design of a wholly new pc structure. The VAX 780, a quick, highly effective and environment friendly minicomputer, was an enormous success, fueling gross sales that by the early Eighties had made D.E.C. the world’s second-largest pc maker.
“Gordon Bell was an enormous within the pc trade,” mentioned Howard Anderson, founding father of the Yankee Group, a know-how trade analysis agency that tracked the market in that period. “I give him as a lot credit score for D.E.C.’s success as Ken Olsen. He believed within the primacy of engineering expertise, and he attracted among the greatest engineers within the trade to D.E.C., which turned a spot of nice ferment.”
At D.E.C., the strain between Mr. Olsen and Mr. Bell once more turned insufferable. Stressed by the strain to maintain turning out winners and by Mr. Olsen’s overbearing presence, Mr. Bell turned fast to anger (he was identified to throw erasers at individuals in conferences) and left his engineers offended and confused. In March 1983, on a ski journey to Snowmass, Colo., together with his spouse and a number of other of the corporate’s prime engineers, Mr. Bell suffered a large coronary heart assault in his ski chalet and may need died if not for the efforts of Bob Puffer, an organization vp, who revived him with CPR.
After months of recuperation, he returned to work however determined it was time to go away for good. Over the protests of a number of prime firm executives, he stop in the summertime of 1983.
Chester Gordon Bell was born on Aug. 19, 1934, in Kirksville, Mo., to Chester Bell, an electrician who owned an equipment retailer, and Lola (Gordon) Bell, who taught grade college.
He developed a congenital coronary heart drawback when he was 7 and spent a lot of the second grade at residence, principally in mattress. He spent his confinement wiring circuits, working chemistry experiments and reducing out puzzles with a jigsaw. After he recovered, he spent numerous hours in his father’s store studying about electrical restore. By age 12, he was knowledgeable electrician — putting in the primary residence dishwashers, fixing motors and tearing aside mechanical devices to rebuild them.
Mr. Bell graduated from M.I.T. in 1957 with a grasp’s diploma in electrical engineering. He then earned a Fulbright scholarship to the University of New South Wales in Australia the place he developed and taught the college’s first graduate course in pc design. While there, he met Gwen Druyor, one other Fulbright scholar, whom he married in 1979 and with whom he would discovered the Computer History Museum in Boston in 1996. They divorced in 2002.
Though he returned to M.I.T. and labored towards a Ph.D., Mr. Bell deserted that effort to hitch Digital Equipment Corporation. He had no real interest in analysis, believing that it was an engineer’s job to construct issues.
After he left the corporate, Mr. Bell was a founding father of each Encore Computer and Ardent Computer. In 1986, he delved into the world of public coverage when he joined the National Science Foundation and led the supercomputer networking effort that resulted in an early iteration of the web known as the National Research and Education Network. In 1987, he sponsored the ACM Gordon Bell Prize for work in parallel computing.
He finally moved to California, the place he turned a Silicon Valley angel investor and, in 1991, an adviser to Microsoft, which was opening its first analysis lab in Redmond, Wash. Mr. Bell joined the Microsoft Research Silicon Valley Lab full time in 1995. There he labored on MyLifeBits, a database designed to seize all of his life’s info — articles, books, CDs, letters, emails, music, residence motion pictures and movies — in a cloud-based digital database.
Mr. Bell is survived by his second spouse, Sheridan Sinclaire-Bell, whom he married in 2009; his son, Brigham, and his daughter, Laura Bell, each from his first marriage; his stepdaughter, Logan Forbes; his sister, Sharon Smith; and 4 grandchildren.
In the 1985 Computerworld interview, Mr. Bell defined his method for repeated know-how successes. “The trick in any know-how,” he mentioned, “is figuring out when to get on the bandwagon, figuring out when to push for change, after which figuring out when it’s dead and time to get off.”
Alex Traub contributed reporting.