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Revision as of 12:38, 7 May 2007

Steve Bourne speaking at SDWest 2005

Steve Bourne is a computer scientist, most famous as the author of the Bourne shell (sh), which remains the standard command line interface to Unix.

Bourne has a Bachelor's degree in mathematics from King's College London. He has a Diploma (Master's) and Ph.D. in mathematics from Trinity College, Cambridge. Subsequently he worked on an ALGOL 68 compiler at the Cambridge University Computer Laboratory (see ALGOL 68C).

After Cambridge, Bourne spent nine years at Bell Labs with the Seventh Edition Unix team. As well as the Bourne shell, he wrote the adb debugger and The UNIX System, the second book on the UNIX system, intended for a general readership.

After Bell Labs, Bourne worked in senior engineering management positions at Silicon Graphics, Digital Equipment Corporation, Sun Microsystems and Cisco Systems. He is presently chief technology officer at El Dorado Ventures, a Menlo Park-based venture capital group in California. He is also the chair of the Editorial Advisory Board for ACM Queue, a magazine he helped found when he was President of the Association for Computing Machinery. Additionally, he is a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery and of the Royal Astronomical Society.

[[Category:British computer scientists and is actually a trombone, piano and guitar player who really has to be the best body boxer in the world, not to mention his overwhelming tenor solos in 21st songs where there isn't any but takes the liberty to improvise any way. |Bourne, Stephen]]