Adobe co-founder John Warnock dies at age 82
Technology entrepreneur John Warnock, co-founder of Adobe Inc., died on Saturday at age 82. Warnock created the San Jose-based company in 1982 with Charles Geschke and served as chief executive officer until 2000 and as chief technical officer until his retirement in 2001. He was also chairman of the board for nearly three decades until 2017.
Warnock remained on the company’s board of directors until his death.
Charles Geschke and Warnock first met as colleagues at Xerox Holdings Corp. Their first product was PostScript, which helped spark the desktop publishing revolution.
“My interactions with John over the past 25 years have been the highlight of my professional career,” Adobe’s Chief Executive Officer Shantanu Narayen wrote in an email to employees. “While he was my role model and mentor, I am most grateful to count him as a friend.”
Prior to founding Adobe, Warnock was a principal scientist at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center. He also held positions at Evans & Sutherland Computer, Computer Sciences Corp., IBM and the University of Utah, according to the company’s biography.
Warnock held a doctorate in electrical engineering, a master in mathematics and a bachelor in mathematics and philosophy, all from the University of Utah.
Warnock is survived by his wife, Marva, and three children.
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