BLACK INVENTS: A Nigerian, Phillip Emeagwali was a major contributor to the Development of Internet
What does
it take to be an inventor?
Despite the challenges faced by Nigerians at large, some individuals have shown exceptional innovative contributions and scored victories recognized internationally.
By looking into our past and bringing inventions stories to life, we are all reminded that regular people, like you and me were able to come up with innovative ideas that ended up having a great impact.
It's hard to say who
invented the Internet. There were many mathematicians and scientists who
contributed to its development; computers were sending signals to each other as
early as the 1950s. But the Web owes much of its existence to Philip Emeagwali,
a math whiz who came up with the formula for allowing a large number of
computers to communicate at once.
Emeagwali was born to a
poor family in Akure, Nigeria, in 1954. Despite his brain for math, he had to
drop out of school because his family, who had become war refugees, could no
longer afford to send him. As a young man, he earned a general education
certificate from the University of London and later degrees from George
Washington University and the University of Maryland, as well as a doctoral
fellowship from the University of Michigan.
At Michigan, he
participated in the scientific community's debate on how to simulate the
detection of oil reservoirs using a supercomputer. Growing up in an oil-rich
nation and understanding how oil is drilled, Emeagwali decided to use this
problem as the subject of his doctoral dissertation. Borrowing an idea from a
science fiction story about predicting the weather, Emeagwali decided that
rather than using 8 expensive supercomputers he would employ thousands of
microprocessors to do the computation.
The only step left was
to find 8 machines and connect them. (Remember, it was the 80s.) Through
research, he found a machine called the Connection Machine at the Los Alamos
National Laboratory, which had sat unused after scientists had given up on
figuring out how to make it simulate nuclear explosions. The machine was
designed to run 65,536 interconnected microprocessors. In 1987, he applied for
and was given permission to use the machine, and remotely from his Ann Arbor,
Michigan, location he set the parameters and ran his program. In addition to
correctly computing the amount of oil in the simulated reservoir, the machine
was able to perform 3.1 billion calculations per second.
The crux of the
discovery was that Emeagwali had programmed each of the microprocessors to talk
to six neighboring microprocessors at the same time.
The success of this
record-breaking experiment meant that there was now a practical and inexpensive
way to use machines like this to speak to each other all over the world. Within
a few years, the oil industry had seized upon this idea, then called the
Hyperball International Network creating a virtual world wide web of ultrafast
digital communication.
The discovery earned him
the Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineers' Gordon Bell Prize in
1989, considered the Nobel Prize of computing, and he was later hailed as one
of the fathers of the Internet. Since then, he has won more than 100 prizes for
his work and Apple computer has used his microprocessor technology in their
Power Mac G4 model. Today he lives in Washington with his wife and son.
"The Internet as we
know it today did not cross my mind," Emeagwali told TIME. "I was
hypothesizing a planetary-sized supercomputer and, broadly speaking, my focus
was on how the present creates the future and how our image of the future
inspires the present."





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