Philip Emeagwali

Computer

Birthday August 23, 1954

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Akure, Colonial Nigeria From Onitsha, Anambra State

Age 69 years old

Nationality Nigeria

#60461 Most Popular

1954

Philip Emeagwali (born 23 August 1954) is a computer scientist originally from Nigeria.

Philip Emeagwali was born in Akure, Nigeria on 23 August 1954.

He was raised in Onitsha in the South Eastern part of Nigeria.

1967

His early schooling was suspended in 1967 as a result of the Nigerian Civil War.

At age 13, he worked in the Biafran army.

After the war he completed high-school equivalence through self-study.

Later on he married Dale Brown Emeagwali, an African-American microbiologist.

He traveled to the United States to study under a scholarship following completion of a course at the University of London.

1977

He received a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Oregon State University in 1977.

1986

He later moved to Washington D.C., receiving in 1986 a master's degree from George Washington University in ocean and marine engineering, and a second master's in applied mathematics from the University of Maryland.

Next magazine suggested that Emeagwali claimed to have further degrees.

During this time, he worked as a civil engineer at the Bureau of Land Reclamation in Wyoming.

1987

Emeagwali studied for a Ph.D. degree from the University of Michigan from 1987 through 1991.

His thesis was not accepted by a committee of internal and external examiners and thus he was not awarded the degree.

Emeagwali filed a court challenge, stating that the decision was a violation of his civil rights and that the university had discriminated against him in several ways because of his race.

The court challenge was dismissed, as was an appeal to the Michigan state Court of Appeals.

1989

He won the 1989 Gordon Bell Prize for price-performance in high-performance computing applications, in an oil reservoir modeling calculation using a novel mathematical formulation and implementation.

He is known for making controversial claims about his achievements that are disputed by the scientific community.

Emeagwali received the 1989 Gordon Bell Prize for an application of the CM-2 massively-parallel computer.

The application used computational fluid dynamics for oil-reservoir modeling.

He received a prize in "price/performance" category, with a performance figure of about 400 Mflops/$1M.

The winner in the "performance" category was also the winner of the Price/performance category, but unable to receive two prizes: Mobil Research and Thinking Machines used the CM-2 for seismic data processing and achieved the higher ratio of 500 Mflops/$1M.

The judges decided on one award per entry.

His method involved each microprocessor communicating with six neighbors.

Emeagwali's simulation was the first program to apply a pseudo-time approach to reservoir modeling.

He was cited by Bill Clinton as an example of what Nigerians can achieve when given the opportunity and is frequently featured in popular press articles for Black History Month.

Emeagwali has made several controversial claims about his achievements that are disputed by the scientific community.

His claim of being a father of the Internet, of having invented the Connection Machine, of possessing 41 patented inventions, of winning "the Nobel Prize of Computing" and of being a "doctor" and/or "professor" have been conclusively debunked with widely documented evidence.

2009

Speaking during a visit to Switzerland in April 2009, Mr. Emeagwali said he was the first to program a hypercube "to solve a grand challenge defined as the 20 gold-ring problems in computing. That discovery, in part, inspired the reinvention of supercomputers as an Internet."

He claimed that by his effort, he was able to set three world records and improve on Newton's second law of motion.