Education
Marie, Michigan, Bemer graduated from Cranbrook School in 1936 and took a Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics at Albion College in 1940.
Marie, Michigan, Bemer graduated from Cranbrook School in 1936 and took a Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics at Albion College in 1940.
Born in Sault Ste. He earned a Certificate in Aeronautical Engineering at Curtiss-Wright Technical Institute in 1941. Bemer began his career as an aerodynamicist at Douglas Aircraft Company in 1941, then worked for Research and Development Corporation from 1951, International Business Machines Corporation from 1957, and Honeywell from 1974. He also worked for Universal Automatic Computer. He served on the committee which amalgamated the design for his COMTRAN language with Grace Hopper"s FLOW-MATIC and thus produced the specifications for Common Business Oriented Language. He also served, with Hugh McGregor Ross and others, on the separate committee which defined the ASCII character codeset in 1960, contributing several characters which had not previously been used by computers including the ESCape character, the backslash character, and the curly bracket characters.
As a result he is sometimes known as The Father of ASCII. Bemer is probably the earliest proponent of the Software Factory concept.
He mentioned it in his 1968 paper “The economics of program production”. Other notable contributions to computing include the first publication of the time-sharing concept and the first attempts to prepare for the Year 2000 problem in publications as early as 1971.
Acting in an advisory capacity, Bob and Honeywell employees Eric Clamons and Richard Keys developed TEX, the Text Executive Programming Language
In the late 1990s, as a retiree, Bob invented an approach to year 2000 (Year 2000) date conversion, to avoid anticipated problems when dates without centuries were compared in programs for which source code was not available. This involved detecting six and eight character operations at run time and checking their operands, adjusting the comparison so that low years in the new century did not appear to precede the last years of the twentieth century.
Bob Bemer maintained an extensive collection of archival material on early computer software development still online at www.bobbemer.com.
Bemer died at his home in Possum Kingdom Lake, Texas in 2004 at age 84 after a battle with cancer.