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Paul Graham (programmer)

Paul Graham (/ɡræm/; born 1964)[3] is an English-American computer scientist, essayist, entrepreneur, investor, and author. He is best known for his work on the programming language Lisp, his former startup Viaweb (later renamed Yahoo! Store), co-founding the influential startup accelerator and seed capital firm Y Combinator, his essays, and Hacker News.

Paul Graham
Paul Graham, c. 2007
Born (1964-11-13) November 13, 1964 (age 59)[1]
CitizenshipBritish
American
EducationGateway High School
Alma materCornell University (BA)
Harvard University (MS, PhD)
Known forViaweb
Y Combinator
Hacker News
Hackers & Painters
SpouseJessica Livingston (m. 2008)
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
ThesisThe State of a Program and Its Uses (1990)
Websitepaulgraham.com

He is the author of several computer programming books, including: On Lisp,[4] ANSI Common Lisp,[5] and Hackers & Painters.[6] Technology journalist Steven Levy has described Graham as a "hacker philosopher".[7]

Graham was born in England, where he and his family maintain permanent residence. However he is also a citizen of the United States, where he earned his degrees, and resided in until 2016.

Education and early life edit

Graham and his family moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1968, where he later attended Gateway High School. Graham gained interest in science and mathematics from his father who was a nuclear physicist.[8]

Graham received a Bachelor of Arts with a major in philosophy from Cornell University in 1986.[9][10][11] He then received a Master of Science in 1988 and a Doctor of Philosophy in 1990, both in computer science from Harvard University.[9][12]

Graham has also studied painting at the Rhode Island School of Design and at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence.[9][12]

Career edit

In 1996, Graham and Robert Morris founded Viaweb and recruited Trevor Blackwell shortly after. They believed that Viaweb was the first application service provider.[13] Graham received a patent for webapps based on his work at Viaweb.[14] Viaweb's software, written mostly in Common Lisp, allowed users to make their own Internet stores. In the summer of 1998, after Jerry Yang received a strong recommendation from Ali Partovi,[15] Viaweb was sold to Yahoo! for 455,000 shares of Yahoo! stock, valued at $49.6 million.[16] After the acquisition, the product became Yahoo! Store.

Graham later gained notice for his essays, which he posts on his personal website. Essay subjects range from Beating the Averages,[17] which compares Lisp to other programming languages and introduced the hypothetical programming language Blub, to Why Nerds are Unpopular,[18] a discussion of nerd life in high school. A collection of his essays has been published as Hackers & Painters[6] by O'Reilly Media, which includes a discussion of the growth of Viaweb and what Graham perceives to be the advantages of Lisp to program it.

In 2001, Graham announced that he was working on a new dialect of Lisp named Arc. It was released on 29 January 2008.[19] Over the years since, he has written several essays describing features or goals of the language, and some internal projects at Y Combinator have been written in Arc, most notably the Hacker News web forum and news aggregator program.

In 2005, after giving a talk at the Harvard Computer Society later published as How to Start a Startup, Graham along with Trevor Blackwell, Jessica Livingston, and Robert Morris started Y Combinator to provide seed funding to a large number of startups, particularly those started by younger, more technically oriented founders. Y Combinator has now invested in more than 1300 startups, including Reddit, Twitch (formerly Justin.tv), Xobni, Dropbox, Airbnb and Stripe.[20]

BusinessWeek included Paul Graham in the 2008 edition of its annual feature, The 25 Most Influential People on the Web.[21]

In response to the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), Graham announced in late 2011 that no representatives of any company supporting it would be invited to Y Combinator's Demo Day events.[22]

In February 2014, Graham stepped down from his day-to-day role at Y Combinator.[23]

In October 2019, Graham announced a specification for another new dialect of Lisp, written in itself, named Bel.[24]

Graham's hierarchy of disagreement edit

 
Graham's hierarchy of disagreement

Graham proposed a disagreement hierarchy in a 2008 essay How to Disagree,[25] putting types of argument into a seven-point hierarchy and observing that "If moving up the disagreement hierarchy makes people less mean, that will make most of them happier." Graham also suggested that the hierarchy can be thought of as a pyramid, as the highest forms of disagreement are rarer.

Following this hierarchy, Graham notes that articulate forms of name-calling (e.g., "The author is a self-important dilettante") are no different from crude insults. When in disagreement people often become more animated and engaged, and this leads to them becoming angry.[26] At the lower levels, the attacks are directed against the person, which can be hateful. Higher levels of argument are directed against the idea, which is easier to recognize and accept.[27] When people argue at the higher levels, the exchange of viewpoint is more informative and helpful.[28]

The Blub paradox edit

Graham considers the hierarchy of programming languages with the example of Blub, a hypothetically average language "right in the middle of the abstractness continuum. It is not the most powerful language, but it is more powerful than Cobol or machine language."[29] It was used by Graham to illustrate a comparison, beyond Turing completeness, of programming language power, and more specifically to illustrate the difficulty of comparing a programming language one knows to one that one does not.

...These studies would like to formally prove that a certain language is more or less expressive than another language. Determining such a relation between languages objectively rather than subjectively seems to be somewhat problematic, a phenomenon that Paul Graham has discussed in "The Blub Paradox".[30][31]

Graham considers a hypothetical Blub programmer. When the programmer looks down the "power continuum", they consider the lower languages to be less powerful because they miss some feature that a Blub programmer is used to. But when they look up, they fail to realise that they are looking up: they merely see "weird languages" with unnecessary features and assumes they are equivalent in power, but with "other hairy stuff thrown in as well". When Graham considers the point of view of a programmer using a language higher than Blub, he describes that programmer as looking down on Blub and noting its "missing" features from the point of view of the higher language.[30]

Graham describes this as the Blub paradox and concludes that "By induction, the only programmers in a position to see all the differences in power between the various languages are those who understand the most powerful one."[30]

The concept has been cited by programmers such as Joel Spolsky.[32]

Personal life edit

In 2008, Graham married Jessica Livingston.[33][34][35] They have two children, and have been living in England since 2016.[36][37]

References edit

  1. ^ @paulg (13 January 2023). "Register" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  2. ^ "No; I was born in Weymouth, England. My father's Welsh though". Hacker News. Ycombinator. 5 October 2008. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  3. ^ "Graham, Paul 1964- Authorities & Vocabularies (Library of Congress Name Authority File)". U.S. Library of Congress. 11 March 2005. Retrieved 12 March 2012. (Paul Graham, b. Nov. 13, 1964)
  4. ^ Graham, Paul (1994). On Lisp: advanced techniques for Common Lisp. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-030552-9.
  5. ^ Graham, Paul (1996). ANSI Common Lisp. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-370875-6.
  6. ^ a b Graham, Paul (2004). Hackers & painters: big ideas from the computer age. Sebastopol, California: O'Reilly. ISBN 0-596-00662-4.
  7. ^ Levy, Steven. "Y Combinator Has Gone Supernova". Wired.
  8. ^ "What Doesn't Seem Like Work?". Paul Graham. January 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  9. ^ a b c "Bio". Paul Graham. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  10. ^ Paul Graham (March 2005). "Undergraduation". Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  11. ^ EZRA: Cornell's Quarterly Magazine (Fall 2011) "Paul Graham '86"
  12. ^ a b . SpeakerMix.com. Archived from the original on 9 April 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
  13. ^ Graham, Paul. "Was Viaweb First?". Retrieved 19 February 2023.
  14. ^ "US Patent for Method for client-server communications through a minimal interface Patent (Patent # 6,205,469 issued March 20, 2001) - Justia Patents Search". patents.justia.com. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  15. ^ Jessica., Livingston (2010). Founders at work : stories of startups' early days. Apress. ISBN 978-1-4302-1078-8. OCLC 705381923.
  16. ^ . Yahoo! Inc. 8 June 1998. Archived from the original on 1 July 2007. Retrieved 14 April 2008.
  17. ^ Graham, Paul. "Beating the Averages". Paulgraham.com.
  18. ^ Graham, Paul. "Why Nerds are Unpopular". Paulgraham.com.
  19. ^ Graham, Paul (29 January 2008). "Arc's Out". Paulgraham.com. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  20. ^ "Y Combinator Companies". Y Combinator Universe. April 2020. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  21. ^ . Bloomberg BusinessWeek. 29 September 2008. Archived from the original on 24 April 2012. Retrieved 29 September 2008.
  22. ^ Tsotsis, Alexia (22 December 2011). "Paul Graham: SOPA Supporting Companies No Longer Allowed at YC Demo Day". TechCrunch. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
  23. ^ "Paul Graham Steps Down as President of Y Combinator". NBC News. 21 February 2014. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  24. ^ Graham, Paul (2019). "Bel". paulgraham.com. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
  25. ^ Graham, Paul (March 2008). "How to Disagree". Paul Graham. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
  26. ^ Leslie, Ian (16 October 2021). "How to have better arguments online". The Guardian. Guardian News & Media Limited. Retrieved 28 October 2023.
  27. ^ Koblin, Jonas (18 August 2022). "Graham's Hierarchy of Disagreement". Sproutsschools.com. Sprouts Learning Co., Ltd. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
  28. ^ Harris, Gregory (14 August 2021). "Learning to disagree: Paul Graham and the hierarchy of argumentative quality". warbletoncouncil.org. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
  29. ^ Graham, Paul (2001). "Beating the Averages". Retrieved 28 April 2007.; published in Hackers & Painters, 2004; the essay was also reprinted in The Planning and Scheduling Working Group Report on Programming Languages 16 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, by JM Adams, R Hawkins, C Myers, C Sontag, S Speck
  30. ^ a b c Robinson, D. (PDF). Verilab. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 April 2022.
  31. ^ Hidders, J.; Paredaens, J.; Vercammen, R.; Marrara, S. "Expressive power of recursion and aggregates in XQuery" (PDF). Adrem Data Lab. University of Antwerp.
  32. ^ Spolsky, Joel (29 December 2005). "The Perils of JavaSchools". More Joel on Software.
  33. ^ "Where are we going?". Arclanguage.org. 26 October 2008. Retrieved 14 November 2008.
  34. ^ "Congrats to PG on getting hitched". news.ycombinator.com. 2 June 2008. Retrieved 14 November 2008.
  35. ^ Graham, Paul (January 2009). . Y Combinator. Archived from the original on 13 March 2012. Jessica Livingston and I (who are married despite our different last names) are expecting our first child any day now.
  36. ^ @paulg (14 April 2020). "@OconHQ We live in England" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  37. ^ Paul Graham [@paulg] (25 January 2023). "Yep, since 2016" (Tweet) – via Twitter.

External links edit

  • Inc. magazine profile
  • Audio: What Business Can Learn From Open Source
  • Video: "Be Good": Paul Graham at Startup School 08
  • Techcrunch interview
  • Roberts, Russ (3 August 2009). "Graham on Start-ups, Innovation, and Creativity". EconTalk. Library of Economics and Liberty.
  • The Hundred-Year Language, an essay

paul, graham, programmer, paul, graham, born, 1964, english, american, computer, scientist, essayist, entrepreneur, investor, author, best, known, work, programming, language, lisp, former, startup, viaweb, later, renamed, yahoo, store, founding, influential, . Paul Graham ɡ r ae m born 1964 3 is an English American computer scientist essayist entrepreneur investor and author He is best known for his work on the programming language Lisp his former startup Viaweb later renamed Yahoo Store co founding the influential startup accelerator and seed capital firm Y Combinator his essays and Hacker News Paul GrahamPaul Graham c 2007Born 1964 11 13 November 13 1964 age 59 1 Weymouth Dorset England 2 CitizenshipBritishAmericanEducationGateway High SchoolAlma materCornell University BA Harvard University MS PhD Known forViawebY CombinatorHacker NewsHackers amp PaintersSpouseJessica Livingston m 2008 Scientific careerFieldsComputer scienceThesisThe State of a Program and Its Uses 1990 Websitepaulgraham wbr com He is the author of several computer programming books including On Lisp 4 ANSI Common Lisp 5 and Hackers amp Painters 6 Technology journalist Steven Levy has described Graham as a hacker philosopher 7 Graham was born in England where he and his family maintain permanent residence However he is also a citizen of the United States where he earned his degrees and resided in until 2016 Contents 1 Education and early life 2 Career 2 1 Graham s hierarchy of disagreement 2 2 The Blub paradox 3 Personal life 4 References 5 External linksEducation and early life editGraham and his family moved to Pittsburgh Pennsylvania in 1968 where he later attended Gateway High School Graham gained interest in science and mathematics from his father who was a nuclear physicist 8 Graham received a Bachelor of Arts with a major in philosophy from Cornell University in 1986 9 10 11 He then received a Master of Science in 1988 and a Doctor of Philosophy in 1990 both in computer science from Harvard University 9 12 Graham has also studied painting at the Rhode Island School of Design and at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence 9 12 Career editIn 1996 Graham and Robert Morris founded Viaweb and recruited Trevor Blackwell shortly after They believed that Viaweb was the first application service provider 13 Graham received a patent for webapps based on his work at Viaweb 14 Viaweb s software written mostly in Common Lisp allowed users to make their own Internet stores In the summer of 1998 after Jerry Yang received a strong recommendation from Ali Partovi 15 Viaweb was sold to Yahoo for 455 000 shares of Yahoo stock valued at 49 6 million 16 After the acquisition the product became Yahoo Store Graham later gained notice for his essays which he posts on his personal website Essay subjects range from Beating the Averages 17 which compares Lisp to other programming languages and introduced the hypothetical programming language Blub to Why Nerds are Unpopular 18 a discussion of nerd life in high school A collection of his essays has been published as Hackers amp Painters 6 by O Reilly Media which includes a discussion of the growth of Viaweb and what Graham perceives to be the advantages of Lisp to program it In 2001 Graham announced that he was working on a new dialect of Lisp named Arc It was released on 29 January 2008 19 Over the years since he has written several essays describing features or goals of the language and some internal projects at Y Combinator have been written in Arc most notably the Hacker News web forum and news aggregator program In 2005 after giving a talk at the Harvard Computer Society later published as How to Start a Startup Graham along with Trevor Blackwell Jessica Livingston and Robert Morris started Y Combinator to provide seed funding to a large number of startups particularly those started by younger more technically oriented founders Y Combinator has now invested in more than 1300 startups including Reddit Twitch formerly Justin tv Xobni Dropbox Airbnb and Stripe 20 BusinessWeek included Paul Graham in the 2008 edition of its annual feature The 25 Most Influential People on the Web 21 In response to the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act SOPA Graham announced in late 2011 that no representatives of any company supporting it would be invited to Y Combinator s Demo Day events 22 In February 2014 Graham stepped down from his day to day role at Y Combinator 23 In October 2019 Graham announced a specification for another new dialect of Lisp written in itself named Bel 24 Graham s hierarchy of disagreement edit nbsp Graham s hierarchy of disagreement Graham proposed a disagreement hierarchy in a 2008 essay How to Disagree 25 putting types of argument into a seven point hierarchy and observing that If moving up the disagreement hierarchy makes people less mean that will make most of them happier Graham also suggested that the hierarchy can be thought of as a pyramid as the highest forms of disagreement are rarer Following this hierarchy Graham notes that articulate forms of name calling e g The author is a self important dilettante are no different from crude insults When in disagreement people often become more animated and engaged and this leads to them becoming angry 26 At the lower levels the attacks are directed against the person which can be hateful Higher levels of argument are directed against the idea which is easier to recognize and accept 27 When people argue at the higher levels the exchange of viewpoint is more informative and helpful 28 The Blub paradox editGraham considers the hierarchy of programming languages with the example of Blub a hypothetically average language right in the middle of the abstractness continuum It is not the most powerful language but it is more powerful than Cobol or machine language 29 It was used by Graham to illustrate a comparison beyond Turing completeness of programming language power and more specifically to illustrate the difficulty of comparing a programming language one knows to one that one does not These studies would like to formally prove that a certain language is more or less expressive than another language Determining such a relation between languages objectively rather than subjectively seems to be somewhat problematic a phenomenon that Paul Graham has discussed in The Blub Paradox 30 31 Graham considers a hypothetical Blub programmer When the programmer looks down the power continuum they consider the lower languages to be less powerful because they miss some feature that a Blub programmer is used to But when they look up they fail to realise that they are looking up they merely see weird languages with unnecessary features and assumes they are equivalent in power but with other hairy stuff thrown in as well When Graham considers the point of view of a programmer using a language higher than Blub he describes that programmer as looking down on Blub and noting its missing features from the point of view of the higher language 30 Graham describes this as the Blub paradox and concludes that By induction the only programmers in a position to see all the differences in power between the various languages are those who understand the most powerful one 30 The concept has been cited by programmers such as Joel Spolsky 32 Personal life editIn 2008 Graham married Jessica Livingston 33 34 35 They have two children and have been living in England since 2016 36 37 References edit paulg 13 January 2023 Register Tweet via Twitter No I was born in Weymouth England My father s Welsh though Hacker News Ycombinator 5 October 2008 Retrieved 8 April 2020 Graham Paul 1964 Authorities amp Vocabularies Library of Congress Name Authority File U S Library of Congress 11 March 2005 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Paul Graham b Nov 13 1964 Graham Paul 1994 On Lisp advanced techniques for Common Lisp Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 030552 9 Graham Paul 1996 ANSI Common Lisp Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 370875 6 a b Graham Paul 2004 Hackers amp painters big ideas from the computer age Sebastopol California O Reilly ISBN 0 596 00662 4 Levy Steven Y Combinator Has Gone Supernova Wired What Doesn t Seem Like Work Paul Graham January 2015 Retrieved 28 May 2023 a b c Bio Paul Graham Retrieved 22 July 2011 Paul Graham March 2005 Undergraduation Retrieved 22 July 2011 EZRA Cornell s Quarterly Magazine Fall 2011 Paul Graham 86 a b Paul Graham biography SpeakerMix com Archived from the original on 9 April 2012 Retrieved 6 March 2012 Graham Paul Was Viaweb First Retrieved 19 February 2023 US Patent for Method for client server communications through a minimal interface Patent Patent 6 205 469 issued March 20 2001 Justia Patents Search patents justia com Retrieved 15 February 2024 Jessica Livingston 2010 Founders at work stories of startups early days Apress ISBN 978 1 4302 1078 8 OCLC 705381923 Yahoo to Acquire Viaweb Yahoo Inc 8 June 1998 Archived from the original on 1 July 2007 Retrieved 14 April 2008 Graham Paul Beating the Averages Paulgraham com Graham Paul Why Nerds are Unpopular Paulgraham com Graham Paul 29 January 2008 Arc s Out Paulgraham com Retrieved 9 April 2020 Y Combinator Companies Y Combinator Universe April 2020 Retrieved 9 April 2020 The Papa Bear Paul Graham Bloomberg BusinessWeek 29 September 2008 Archived from the original on 24 April 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2008 Tsotsis Alexia 22 December 2011 Paul Graham SOPA Supporting Companies No Longer Allowed at YC Demo Day TechCrunch Retrieved 23 December 2011 Paul Graham Steps Down as President of Y Combinator NBC News 21 February 2014 Retrieved 15 February 2024 Graham Paul 2019 Bel paulgraham com Retrieved 26 September 2021 Graham Paul March 2008 How to Disagree Paul Graham Retrieved 27 October 2023 Leslie Ian 16 October 2021 How to have better arguments online The Guardian Guardian News amp Media Limited Retrieved 28 October 2023 Koblin Jonas 18 August 2022 Graham s Hierarchy of Disagreement Sproutsschools com Sprouts Learning Co Ltd Retrieved 2 November 2023 Harris Gregory 14 August 2021 Learning to disagree Paul Graham and the hierarchy of argumentative quality warbletoncouncil org Retrieved 2 November 2023 Graham Paul 2001 Beating the Averages Retrieved 28 April 2007 published in Hackers amp Painters 2004 the essay was also reprinted in The Planning and Scheduling Working Group Report on Programming Languages Archived 16 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine by JM Adams R Hawkins C Myers C Sontag S Speck a b c Robinson D An Introduction to Aspect Oriented Programming in e PDF Verilab Archived from the original PDF on 11 April 2022 Hidders J Paredaens J Vercammen R Marrara S Expressive power of recursion and aggregates in XQuery PDF Adrem Data Lab University of Antwerp Spolsky Joel 29 December 2005 The Perils of JavaSchools More Joel on Software Where are we going Arclanguage org 26 October 2008 Retrieved 14 November 2008 Congrats to PG on getting hitched news ycombinator com 2 June 2008 Retrieved 14 November 2008 Graham Paul January 2009 California Year Round Y Combinator Archived from the original on 13 March 2012 Jessica Livingston and I who are married despite our different last names are expecting our first child any day now paulg 14 April 2020 OconHQ We live in England Tweet via Twitter Paul Graham paulg 25 January 2023 Yep since 2016 Tweet via Twitter External links editThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references September 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Paul Graham Inc magazine profile Audio What Business Can Learn From Open Source Video Be Good Paul Graham at Startup School 08 Paul Graham provides stunning answer to spam e mails Techcrunch interview Roberts Russ 3 August 2009 Graham on Start ups Innovation and Creativity EconTalk Library of Economics and Liberty The Hundred Year Language an essay Paul Graham s essays in all languages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul Graham programmer amp oldid 1222114285, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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