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Philip Emeagwali won the Gordon Bell
supercomputing prize in 1989 for applying the power of networked computers
to analysis of oil field reserves. The child of a poor Nigerian family,
Emeagwali was largely self-taught in the sciences until 1974, when he won
a scholarship to Oregon State University. During the 1970s and '80s he
furthered his education at George Washington University and the University
of Maryland, studying mathematics and environmental engineering. In the
1980s he worked on advanced formulas in networked computers, leading to
the Gordon Bell prize. Emeagwali has won several other awards, including a
1998 Distinguished Scientist Award from the World Bank.
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