Greg Whitten

Greg Whitten is an American computer engineer, investor and car collector.

The #3413GT Ferrari 250 GTO was purchased by Whitten around 2000
The #5907 Ferrari 250 LM was owned by Whitten 1994–2005.

Whitten graduated from the University of Virginia with a B.A. in mathematics in 1973, and from Harvard University with a Ph.D. in applied mathematics in 1978.[1]

He worked for Compucolor, a company in Georgia established in 1977 that made the home computer Compucolor II (an early PC) but went out of business in 1983. While there, he reputedly optimized an unlicensed copy of Microsoft Basic so effectively that Microsoft later forgave Compucolor for their infringement in exchange for the rights to the enhancements.[2]

Microsoft 1979–1998

He then worked for Microsoft from 1979 to 1998. He developed the standards for the company's BASIC compiler line.[3]

"GW" in the name of the GW-BASIC dialect (first released 1983) of BASIC developed by Microsoft may have come from Greg Whitten's initials:

"The GW-BASIC name stands for Gee-Whiz BASIC. The GW- name was picked by Bill Gates. He is the one who knows whether it was Gee-Whiz or after me because it has been used both ways. I did set the directions for the BASIC language features after joining the company in 1979."

- Greg Whitten, 13 Apr 2005[3]

As a chief software architect, he also oversaw the development of the enterprise support systems required in Windows for the Microsoft Office.[4]

Numerix 1998–2013

In 1998 he became member of the board of Numerix, a financial software company established 1996, where he had made a major investment and in 2001 was elected Boardman after another major investment. After being its CEO 2003–13, he was succeeded by Steve O'Hanlon.[4]

Car collector

He is also a vintage car enthusiast and has a famous car collection that contains various Ferraris including his first, a Ferrari F40,[5] a Ferrari Enzo (#131632),[6] a Ferrari 250 GTO (#3413GT, 2000–2018), a Ferrari 250 LM (#5907, 1994–2005), a Ferrari 250 GT TdF (#0703GT, 1997–), a Ferrari F50 (#104163, 1995–2004),[7] and two LaFerrari, of which one is the unique in blue electrics.[8] His Ferrari 250 GTO sold for $48.8 million at a public auction in August 2018.[9]

References

  1. Gregory Whitten s LinkedIn page as of June 20, 2018.
  2. "Compucolor history".
  3. Gregory Whitten (2005-04-13). "GW-BASIC". Archived from the original on 2008-09-20. Retrieved 2008-06-29.
  4. "Gregory Whitten, PhD - Numerix". Retrieved 2018-06-20.
  5. Any chance of some F40 owners pics in ferrarichat.com on April 8, 2005.
  6. List of Enzo owners from ferrarichat.com on August 27, 2012.
  7. Lot173 from RM Sothebys auctions
  8. Greg Whitten garage, a photo gallery.
  9. "Sold: Ferrari 250 GTO goes for $48.4m". 26 August 2018.
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