Correction! Philip Emeagwali: Inventor of the World’s Fastest Computer => MYTH

Posted on 26. Feb, 2010 by Leshell Hatley in Mathematics, Scholarly Celebrations

Due to feedback from many of our viewers, we have evidence that the claims of the information obtain from various web resources for this article are a MYTH. We appreciate the help of our viewers and would like to point our readers instead to this article demystifying the claims of Philip Emeagwali.

READ ABOUT MYTHS OF HIS WORK

For clarity about claims, please read details below….

Philip Emeagwali, who has been called the “Bill Gates of Africa,” was born in Nigeria in 1957. TIME Magazine also also called him the “unsung hero of the Internet.” Like many African school children, he dropped out of school at age 14 because his father could not continue paying Emeagwali’s school fees. However, his father continued teaching him at home, and everyday Emeagwali performed mental exercises such as solving 100 math problems in one hour. His father taught him until Philip “knew more than he did.”

Early Life & Education

Growing up in a country torn by civil war, Emeagwali lived in a building crumbled by rocket shells. He believed his intellect was a way out of the line of fire. So he studied hard and eventually received a scholarship to Oregon State University when he was 17 where he obtained a BS in mathematics. He studied for a Ph.D. in Scientific computing from the University of Michigan from 1987-1991 and earned two Masters degrees from George Washington University.

The noted black inventor received acclaim based, at least in part, on his study of nature, specifically bees. Emeagwali saw an inherent efficiency in the way bees construct and work with honeycomb and determined computers that emulate this process could be the most efficient and powerful. In 1989, emulating the bees’ honeycomb construction, Emeagwali used 65,000 processors to invent the world’s fastest computer, which performs computations at 3.1 billion calculations per second.

Philip Emeagwali’s resume is loaded with many other such feats, including ways of making oil fields more productive – which has resulted in the United States saving hundreds of millions of dollars each year. As one of the most famous African-American inventors of the 20th century, he also has won the Gordon Bell Prize – an award given by by the Association for Computing Machinery in conjunction with the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers each year at The Supercomputing Conference to recognize outstanding achievement in high-performance parallel computing applications. His computers are currently being used to forecast the weather and to predict the likelihood and effects of future global warming.

More information can be found at http://emeagwali.com

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One Response to “Correction! Philip Emeagwali: Inventor of the World’s Fastest Computer => MYTH”

  1. ea

    26. Feb, 2010

    Black Scholars bring it, just like this blog!

    Reply to this comment

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