Martin Edward Newell  | |
|---|---|
| Nationality | English American  | 
| Alma mater | University of Utah | 
| Known for |  Utah Teapot  [1]  Newell's algorithm  | 
| Awards | Elected member of the National Academy of Engineering | 
| Scientific career | |
| Institutions |  CADCentre  University of Utah Xerox PARC CADLINC Ashlar Adobe  | 
| Thesis | The Utilization of Procedure Models in Digital Image Synthesis (1975) | 
| Website |  academic | 
Martin Edward Newell is a British-born computer scientist specializing in computer graphics. He is the creator of the Utah teapot, one of the benchmark models in 3D rendering. [2]
Before immigrating to the US, he worked at what was then the Computer-Aided Design Centre (CADCentre) in Cambridge, UK, [3] along with his brother Dick Newell (who went on to co-found two of the most important UK graphics software companies – Cambridge Interactive Systems (CIS) in 1977 and Smallworld in 1987). At CADCentre, the two Newells and Tom Sancha developed Newell's algorithm, a technique for eliminating cyclic dependencies when ordering polygons to be drawn by a computer graphics system. [4] [5] [6]
 Newell developed the Utah teapot while working on a Ph.D. at the University of Utah, [1] [7] where he also helped develop a version of the painter's algorithm for rendering. He graduated in 1975, and was on the Utah faculty from 1977 to 1979. [8] Later he worked at Xerox PARC, where he worked on JaM, a predecessor of PostScript. JaM stood for "John and Martin" – the John was John Warnock, co-founder of Adobe Systems. [9]
Newell departed Xerox PARC to join CADLINC Inc., [10] a factory automation startup, as VP of Advanced Development. There he led the development of a variety of CAD/CAM software applications, such as CimCAD (a 3-D drafting program) [11] and Intelligent Documentation [12] (an early electronic document editor integrating text, graphics, and information from relational databases).
He departed CADLINC to found the computer-aided design software company Ashlar in 1988. [8] In 2007, Newell was elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering for contributions to computer-graphics modeling, rendering, and printing. [13] He recently[ when? ] retired as an Adobe Fellow at Adobe Systems.[ citation needed ]