Everyone involved
Because you can't do it alone.
Our most excellent logo was designed by Geoffrey Long of Dreamsbay fame.
We have begun to gain some participants "out in the world". These people are absolute saints, because they like our software, and contribute back to it. We like them more than we like Christian, even if he did write his dissertation on all things Transterpreter.
2007-06-14: Ask new contributors for info/blurb.There are a number of people who are (or were) based at the University of Kent, a hotbed for all things occam related.
(Email addresses (in parenthesis) are '@transterpreter.org' unless otherwise noted.)
Christian Jacobsen (christian) is primarily responsible for the interpreter itself. Christian is also the first point of contact regarding the POSIX wrapper (ie. the wrapper that lets the TVM run on desktop-class hardware). Christian was the driving force behind the RoboDeb VM automagic updater, and likes issuing tickets using the Transterpreter Trac system.
Matt Jadud (matt) tends to shepherd the slinker, 42, and the port of the Transterpreter to the Tmote Sky. Matt also played with RoboDeb, and is the Mouth of Sauron for the Transterpreter project (spreader of lies and misinformation).
Damian Dimmich (damian) is caretaker of the SWIG wrapper generator for occam-pi, watches over the wrappers we actively use in the project (SDL, OpenGL, and Player/Stage), did his part for the RoboDeb effort, and cut his teeth on Scheme while driving 42 towards its first milestone, Sagres.
Adam Sampson (adam) provides critical insights and provides a wealth of knowledge about occam-pi and its ilk.
Jon Simpson (js) developed our native LEGO Mindstorms port, and is working more generally on good abstractions for robotic control in occam-pi.
Carl Ritson (carl) occasionally takes a sniper shot at something, never misses, and that's great awesome. He can look at a CSP-based scheduler and in 1.3 seconds say "That's wrong, right there." How amazing is that?