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Technology

Pixar CG Pioneers Pat Hanrahan and Edwin Catmull Share $1M Turing Award (techcrunch.com) 15

The 2019 Turing Award, one of the highest honors in computing, was today awarded to Pat Hanrahan and Ed Catmull, founding members of Pixar who helped shape the future of computer graphics. From a report: The two will share a $1M prize and, of course, the satisfaction of receiving this prestigious award for doing something they clearly love. The award has recently been given to such luminaries as Tim Berners-Lee, cryptographer Martin Hellman, and last year AI pioneers Yoshua Bengio, Geoffrey Hinton, and Yann LeCun. Catmull was at Pixar for more than 30 years, appointed its president from the very beginning as a LucasFilm animation studio bought and repurposed by Steve Jobs. Hanrahan was an early hire, and between them the two would have had enormous effects on the world of CG, even if they hadn't built the poster child for the technology. TechCrunch spoke with Catmull and Hanrahan about the origins of the field and their early work in it that the Association for Computing Machinery chose to recognize this year. "When I started out, graphics didn't really exist," Hanrahan recalled. "I sort of discovered graphics in grad school, but there were no professors, no classes, it wasn't even in the computer sciences, really."
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Pixar CG Pioneers Pat Hanrahan and Edwin Catmull Share $1M Turing Award

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  • Pixar's graphics are impressive, but it doesn't have anything to do with Alan Turing or his work...

    • Discoveries (Score:4, Insightful)

      by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2020 @11:01AM (#59844322)

      The award goes to people who have made significant contributions to computer technology in general. Catmull and Hanrahan did some fundamental work on 3D graphics, as in algorithms that are still widely used today. Pixar used to be a part of ILM, and did a lot of very basic computer graphics research back then.

    • by DavenH ( 1065780 )
      I don't think that's fair. Nobel was a chemist, so why would there be a Nobel Prize for the other sciences? The Turing Award is the equivalent for advances in computing, and CG is at the forefront of machine learning research in many ways -- see https://www.youtube.com/user/D... [youtube.com]

      Something that would be of particular interest to Turing, now that the technology has nearly bridged the uncanny valley, their work has a strong resonance with the Turing Test, in that its goal is to fool us into believing it's the

  • Groundbreaking work (Score:5, Informative)

    by presearch ( 214913 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2020 @01:52PM (#59845156)

    Ed Catmull working out texture mapping, splines, patch surfaces, depth buffering,
    and anti-aliasing, and Pat Hanrahan's inventing the concept of shaders and physically-based
    rendering, all without much of a roadmap or being able to ask the net, is astounding.

    Much of that trailblazing work was done on computing equipment with a testing
    turnaround measured in hours, days, or weeks.

    Alvy Ray Smith also deserves this level of recognition and more for inventing Alpha
    channel compositing, HSV color space, and many other fundamental concepts built
    into today's display systems.

    Alvy pissed off Steve Jobs over a spat about a whiteboard and not putting up with
    Jobs bullying, and as a result, was totally written out of Pixar's history.

    He even came up with the name Pixar. What they did to him was, and still is, a disgrace.

    Alvy is a rare genius, a gifted artist, a patient teacher, and a kind and gentle soul.
    Working with him for the short time that I did was an honor.

    • You think that's something, Ivan Sutherland and Doug Engelbart also did amazing stuff. In the 1960s.

      • You think that's something, Ivan Sutherland and Doug Engelbart also did amazing stuff. In the 1960s.

        Yes, the Turing award committees in 1988 and 1997 would agree with you.

  • I am saddened by the growing fad of big-money prizes awarded to people who have already achieved major success in their field. The Turing Award, Breakthrough Prize, Kavli Prize, all excuses for billionaires to give money to successful old white guys. How many undergrad scholarships could this $1M fund? Rich successful people need to stop patting themselves on the back for giving money to each other.
  • Anyone who thinks Ed Catmull is a nice guy should read up on how he tried to screw over his fellow CG artists in an industrywide wagefixing scheme.

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