Manny Lehman (computer scientist)
Quick Facts
Biography
Meir "Manny" Lehman, FREng (24 January 1925 – 29 December 2010) was a professor in the School of Computing Science at Middlesex University. From 1972 to 2002 he was a Professor and Head of the Computing Department at Imperial College London. His research contributions include the early realization of the software evolution phenomenon and the eponymous Lehman's laws of software evolution.
Career
Lehman was born in Germany on 24 January 1925 and emigrated to England in 1931. He studied mathematics as an undergraduate at Imperial College London where he was involved in the design of the Imperial College Computing Engine's Digital Computer Arithmetic Unit. He spent a year at Ferranti in London before working at Israel's Ministry of Defense from 1957 to 1964. From 1964 to 1972 he worked at IBM's research division in Yorktown Heights, NY where he studied program evolution with Les Belady. The study of IBM's programming process gave the foundations for Lehman's laws of software evolution. In 1972 he returned to Imperial College where he was Head of Section and later Head of Department (1979–1984). Lehman remained at Imperial for some thirty years until 2002 when he moved to the School of Computing Science at Middlesex University.
After retiring from Middlesex he moved to Jerusalem, Israel, where he died on December 29, 2010.
Awards and honors
- Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (1989)
- Fellow of the ACM (1994)
- Harlan D. Mills Award (2001)
- "List of Fellows".
- "ACM Fellows". ACM. Retrieved 2011-06-17.
- "Past recipients for Harlan D. Mills Award". IEEE Computer Society. Retrieved April 13, 2011.