Paul Graham is an English-born American essayist, programmer, venture capitalist, author, entrepreneur and computer scientist best known for his skills on the programming language Lisp, his former startup Viaweb (later renamed Yahoo! Store). He is also the author of various programming books like Hackers and Painters, On Lisp and ANSI Common Lisp.
Graham was born on 13 November 1964, Weymouth, Dorset, England, United Kingdom. He celebrates his birthday on 13th November of every year. He is 55 years old as of 2019.
Paul appears to be quite tall in stature if his photos, relative to his surroundings, are anything to go by. However, details regarding his actual height and other body measurements are currently not publicly available. We are keeping tabs and will update this information once it is out.
Graham attended and graduated from Cornell University with a Bachelor of Arts in philosophy. He earned his Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy (1990) degrees in computer science from Harvard University. He also studied painting at the Rhode Island School of Design and at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence.
Graham married his wife Jessica Livingston in 2008.
Paul and his wife Jessica are proud parents of two children. The family currently live in England.
Graham proposed a “contradiction progressive system” in a 2008 exposition “How to Disagree”, placing kinds of contention into a seven-point chain of importance and seeing that “If climbing the difference pecking order makes individuals less mean, that will make the vast majority of them more joyful.” Graham additionally recommended that the pecking order can be thought of as a pyramid, as the most elevated types of contradiction are rarer.
Following this progression, Graham noticed that eloquent types of ridiculing (e.g., “The creator is a bombastic dabbler”) are the same as unrefined abuse.
Graham considers the pecking order of programming dialects with the case of “Blub”, a speculatively normal language “directly in the center of the relevancy continuum. It isn’t the most impressive language, however, it is more remarkable than Cobol or machine language.” It was utilized by Graham to show a comparison, beyond Turing completeness, of programming language force, and all the more explicitly to delineate the trouble of comparing a programming language one knows to one that one doesn’t.
Graham considers a theoretical Blub developer. At the point when the developer looks down the “power continuum”, he considers the lower dialects to be less amazing on the grounds that they miss some component that a Blub software engineer is utilized to. However, when he looks into, he neglects to understand that he is looking into: he only observes “odd dialects” with superfluous highlights and expect they are proportionate in power, yet with “other hairy stuff tossed in also”. At the point when Graham considers the perspective of a developer utilizing a language higher than Blub, he depicts that software engineer as looking down on Blub and taking note of its “missing” highlights from the perspective of the higher language.
Graham depicts this as the “Blub Catch 22” and concludes that “By induction, the only software engineers in a position to see all the distinctions in power between the different dialects are the individuals who comprehend the most remarkable one.” The concept has been referred to by developers, for example, Joel Spolsky.
In 2001, Graham reported that he was taking a shot at another vernacular of Lisp named Arc. It was discharged on 29 January 2008. Throughout the years, he has composed a few articles portraying highlights or objectives of the language, and some inside undertakings at Y Combinator have been written in Arc, most quite the Hacker News web gathering and news aggregator program. In October 2019, Graham reported a specification for another new lingo of Lisp, written in itself, named Bel.
In 2005, in the wake of giving a discussion at the Harvard Computer Society later distributed as “How to Start a Startup”, Graham along with Trevor Blackwell, Jessica Livingston, and Robert Morris began Y Combinator to give seed financing to an enormous number of new businesses, especially those began by more youthful, all the more in fact arranged organizers. Y Combinator has now put resources into an excess of 1300 new companies, including Reddit, Justin.tv, Xobni, Dropbox, Airbnb, and Stripe.
BusinessWeek remembered Paul Graham for the 2008 edition of its yearly component, The 25 Most Influential People on the Web. In response to the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), Graham reported in late 2011 that no agents of any company supporting it would be welcome to Y Combinator’s Demo Day occasions. In February 2014, Graham ventured down from his everyday job at Y Combinator.
Paul Graham is an English-born American essayist, programmer, venture capitalist, author, entrepreneur and computer scientist who has a net worth of $260 million.
Paul has written various books:
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