As well as piloting for A.V. Roe and Martinsyde amongst others, he flew alongside early British flyers like Tommy Sopwith, Harry Hawker, Gordon Bell and Ronald Kemp.
Gordon Brown | Alexander Graham Bell | Flash Gordon | Bell Labs | Taco Bell | Joshua Bell | Gordon Lightfoot | Dexter Gordon | Gordon Banks | Bell Canada | Charles George Gordon | Mike Gordon | Gordon Highlanders | Liberty Bell | Bell X-1 | Bell | Gordon | For Whom the Bell Tolls | Kim Gordon | Gordon Ramsay | Tinker Bell | Bell Helicopter | bell | Kristen Bell | Saved by the Bell | Lonnie Gordon | Jeff Gordon | Gordon B. Hinckley | Douglas Gordon | Cam Gordon |
Dan Dodge is the co-creator of the QNX Realtime Operating system (with Gordon Bell).
Gwen Bell (born 1934) was the first president of The Computer Museum in Boston, which she co-founded with her husband Gordon Bell.
Roster: Staff Sgt. Addie Bell (Coach), Joe Bell, Gordon Bell (Goal), Billy Gooden, Lin Bend, Jack MacDonald (Captain), Wally Stefaniw, Bobby Love, Oliver "Bud" Ritchie, Bill Heindl Sr., Jack O'Reilly, Joe Ledoux, Lloyd Smith and Don Campbell.
Gordon Bell and Dan Dodge, students at the University of Waterloo in 1980, both took a standard computer science course in operating system design, in which the students constructed a basic real-time kernel.
A Files section contains general documents of the founding and operation of the museum from the Internet Archive, the Computer History Museum, Gordon Bell and Gwen Bell, and Gardner Hendrie.
The story of the early history of the computer museums as The Digital Computer Museum at Digital Equipment Corp. in Maynard MA (1975), The Computer Museum Marlboro MA (1979-1984), moving to Boston (1984-1999) prior to its move to Silicon Valley as The Computer Museum History Center (1995-2000) and becoming the Computer History Museum, Mountain View, CA (2000) is given in Gordon Bell's Microsoft Technical Report MSR-TR-2011-44, Out of a Closet: The Early Years of the Computer Museums.