John Byrne (computer scientist) explained

John Gabriel Byrne
Birth Date:25 July 1933
Birth Place:Dublin, Ireland
Death Place:Dublin
Alma Mater:Trinity College Dublin
Field:Computer science
Work Institutions:Trinity College Dublin

John Gabriel Byrne (15 July 1933 – 16 April 2016) was an Irish computer scientist and engineer. He founded the department of computer science in Trinity College Dublin, serving as its first head and professor, and has been referred to as "The Father of Computing in Ireland".[1] [2]

Early life and education

John Gabriel Byrne was born in Dublin on 25 July 1933. He was the only son of Doreen (née Lawlor) and Thomas Brendan Byrne. The family lived in Rathfarnham. His paternal grandfather was the architect, Thomas Joseph Byrne, as was his great-grandfather, Anthony Scott.[3] He attended Belvedere College and in 1951 he entered Trinity College Dublin (TCD) to study engineering, graduating in 1956. He went on to work in Birmingham with Septimus Willis, and then study for a Diploma in Concrete Technology at Imperial College London. He completed his PhD at TCD under the supervision of Prof William Wright, the head of the School of Engineering. His 1961 doctoral thesis was a study in mathematically complex solutions for torsional stresses in hollow reinforced concrete beams. He studied with Bernard Carré on the English Electric DEUCE computer at Stafford over the course of 2 summers. In 1960, Byrne was awarded an Imperial Chemical Industries Research Fellowship.[4]

Career

Byrne was appointed a junior lecturer at the engineering school at TCD in 1963. Supported by Wright, who campaigned for TCD to buy its first computer in 1962, an IBM 1620. Byrne proposed TCD's first evening course in computer programming and systems analysis which ran for two nights a week. The course was industry aligned, and was aimed at young graduates interested in learning these skills. The success of the evening course led to the creation of a BA Mod degree programme. Byrne has been credited with a key role in the development of the computer industry in Ireland from the 1960s onwards through his pioneering courses in computer science and the quality of the graduates produced. He has also been credited with encouraging more women into the field when it had become predominantly a male discipline.[5]

Byrne became the first head of computer science in TCD when the department was founded in 1969 and was made a Fellow in the same year, becoming Professor of Computer Science in 1973.[6] He subsequently became a Senior Fellow.[7] When the internet was deployed in Ireland for the first time on 17 June 1991 by the Trinity campus company, IEunet, Byrne was a director. The first Irish Ethernet connection in Ireland was installed in the computer science department in Pearse Street. A large number of Byrne's students went on to found indigenous Irish software companies including Iona Technologies, Generics, and Cape Clear Technologies. He was also a founding member of the Irish Computer Society.[8]

In 2005, Byrne supervised the masters students who created the first digitised copy of the Library of Trinity College's 1872 Printed Catalogue. He advised on the Library's Stella Project in the 1990s which digitised the Library's periodicals card catalogue, and the Melon Project in the 2000s which was focused on the digitised Accessions Catalogue.[9] Over the course of his career Byrne collected a large volume of books, publications, and collected examples of hard and software which has now became the core collection of the John Gabriel Byrne Computer Science Collection.[10] [11]

Death and legacy

Byrne retired from TCD in 2003. He died at a nursing home in Blackrock, Dublin on 16 April 2016.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Baker . Sinéad . “The Father of Computing in Ireland”, Influential in Life and in Legacy . universitytimes.ie . 27 April 2022 . 23 October 2016.
  2. News: Professor John Byrne: The father of computing in Ireland . 27 April 2022 . The Irish Times . 23 April 2016 . en.
  3. Web site: Grimson . Jane . John Gabriel Byrne (1933-2016) . tcd.ie . Trinity College Dublin . 27 April 2022.
  4. Web site: Memorial discourse honours Father of Computing in Ireland, Professor John Byrne . Trinity News and Events . 27 April 2022 . 17 May 2018.
  5. News: Taylor . Charlie . Prof John Byrne: the man who turned Ireland into a tech world power . 27 April 2022 . The Irish Times . 19 December 2019 . en.
  6. Book: Webb, D.A. . Barlett . J.R.. 1992 . Trinity College Dublin Record Volume 1991 . Dublin . Trinity College Dublin Press . 1-871408-07-5.
  7. Book: 1994 . The University of Dublin Calenda 1994-95.
  8. Web site: Obituary: ICS Distinguished Fellow - Professor John Byrne . www.ics.ie . 27 April 2022.
  9. Web site: Passing of Professor John Byrne . The Library of Trinity College Dublin: News & Alerts . 27 April 2022 . 28 April 2016.
  10. Web site: The John Gabriel Byrne Computer Science Collection . HSTM Network Ireland . 27 April 2022 . en . 15 October 2019.
  11. Web site: SCSS Treasures Catalog - The John Gabriel Byrne Computer Science Collection - School of Computer Science and Statistics - Trinity College Dublin . www.scss.tcd.ie . 27 April 2022.