TECHNOLOGY
Who Will Tomorrow's Historians Consider Today's Greatest Inventors?
We asked leading figures in technology, science, medicine, and design for nominations. Here's what they said.
By Nicole Allan
NOVEMBER 2013 ISSUE
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Elon Musk
Co-founder, PayPal, SpaceX, and Tesla Motors
NOMINATED BY: Adam Cahan, senior vice president, Yahoo; Mark Hurd, co-president, Oracle; Susan Wojcicki, senior vice president, Google
in the spirit of inveterate and wide-ranging tinkerers like Leonardo da Vinci and Benjamin Franklin, Musk has transformed virtually every field he’s taken an interest in, from electronic payments to commercial spaceflight to electric cars.
Raised in South Africa, Musk studied physics and business in the U.S. Like any good entrepreneur, he dropped out of a Stanford graduate program to launch his first company, an online mapping and directory service whose sale enabled the launch of what would become PayPal—and Musk’s ticket to big-time innovation.
Like many of his PayPal colleagues, Musk used his fortune from the sale of that company to fund a flurry of new ventures, including Tesla, a manufacturer of electric cars, and SpaceX, a commercial spaceflight operation. He splits his time between the companies’ facilities in Palo Alto and Los Angeles, and at one point resorted to taking loans from friends to keep Tesla alive.
The range and scale of Musk’s ambitions have attracted skepticism, but over time, he has proved himself to be not only an ideas man but an astute business thinker. “He’s a guy who dreams big dreams,” says Hurd, “and then makes them happen.”
Musk’s latest dream is the Hyperloop, a giant pneumatic tube that would transport passengers from L.A. to San Francisco in 35 minutes. It sounds crazy, but as Wojcicki points out, “Elon Musk is one of the few people who can propose the Hyperloop and be taken seriously.”
Janette Sadik-Khan
Commissioner, New York City Department of Transportation
NOMINATED BY: Allison Arieff, design writer
in her six years running New York City’s streets, the legendarily data-driven Sadik-Khan has tangibly changed the city’s landscape. Thanks to new open spaces (including a plaza in the middle of Times Square), hundreds of miles of bike lanes, and the nation’s largest bike-share system, New York is now a friendly, pleasant place to navigate on foot or by bicycle—at least, more so than it used to be. Sadik-Khan has also pushed other cities to use transportation infrastructure as a catalyst for economic development.
Markus Persson
Creator, Minecraft
NOMINATED BY: Paola Antonelli, senior curator for architecture and design, Museum of Modern Art
in a world of lushly designed video games, Markus Persson’s Minecraft feels almost old-school. Its characters and settings are constructed from Lego-like blocks that players use to build whatever they like. For Antonelli, who acquired the game this summer for MoMA’s budding video-game collection, this accessibility is revolutionary. “For the first time, people can make things in the digital world without knowing how to program,” she says. “The educational potential is huge.”
Vint Cerf
"Father of the Internet"
NOMINATED BY: Mariette DiChristina, editor in chief, Scientific American
while at the Department of Defense’s Advanced Research Projects Agency in the 1970s, Cerf and his fellow computer scientist Bob Kahn created the TCP/IP technology that enabled the World Wide Web—“setting the stage,” according to DiChristina, “for today’s instant communication and collaboration.”
Ronald W. Davis
Biochemist and geneticist, Stanford
NOMINATED BY: George Church, professor of genetics, Harvard Medical School
a substantial number of the major genetic advances of the past 20 years can be traced back to Davis in some way. He was one of the first scientists to begin mapping and cloning DNA, in the 1960s, and his biotech methods have proved pivotal to the Human Genome Project and the ongoing pursuit of genetically targeted medical treatments. “He’s not just a one-hit wonder,” says Church. “He’s a frequent provider of disruptive core technologies.”
Jeff Bezos
Founder and CEO, Amazon
NOMINATED BY: Kara Swisher, co–executive editor, AllThingsD.com
the story of how Bezos went from selling books out of his Seattle garage to running the world’s biggest online retailer (see “The Amazon Mystery” in this issue) is much mythologized. He “has changed the way retail is done on a scale that no other entrepreneur, save Steve Jobs in mobile, has done for a single industry,” says Swisher. Now that Bezos is turning more attention to his side projects—specifically, a promised reinvention of The Washington Post, which he purchased this summer—his legacy may encompass much more than retail.
Michael Murphy
Co-Founder and CEO, mass Design Group
NOMINATED BY: Tim Brown, CEO, Ideo
a leader in public-interest design, Murphy creates elegant, functional spaces that serve communities not usually consulted about their needs. Murphy’s first project for mass, in collaboration with the global health pioneer Paul Farmer, was an airy, sunlit public hospital in Rwanda, constructed by local laborers from local materials. Like most of mass’s medical projects, it looks way too cool to be a hospital.
Jack Dangermond
Founder, Environmental Systems Research Institute
NOMINATED BY: Richard Saul Wurman, founder, ted Conference
when dangermond spent his life savings of $1,100 to found esri in 1969, the company created paper maps for land-use planning. He could not have predicted that by the 1990s, esri would become the undisputed global leader in the new field of geographic-information-systems software. “Everything takes place someplace,” says Wurman. “What Jack produces is the underpinning of how we understand our world.”
Alex Karp
Co-Founder and CEO, Palantir Technologies
NOMINATED BY: Peter Thiel, partner, Founders Fund, and co-founder, PayPal
palantir works with clients ranging from the CIA to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to organize and animate huge, unwieldy bodies of data, allowing analysts to track suspected terrorists and budding epidemics alike. Karp’s secretive company, which some believe created the software that the National Security Agency uses to spy on American citizens, has come to represent the threat of ubiquitous surveillance—but it also embodies the promise of Big Data. “Technology means doing more with less,” says Thiel, who helped found Palantir and serves as the chairman of its board. “When it comes to national security, this means increasing safety while reducing violations of civil liberties.”
Nicole Allan is a former senior editor at The Atlantic.