Born in Oslo, Norway, where his father had a position with the U.S. Air Force, Niall was raised in Fairbanks, Alaska, 100 miles south of the Arctic Circle. At 91²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ, he wrote his thesis, “Cognitive Dissonance Theory and Apocalyptic Literature: Passion, Intrigue and the Lust for Explanation,” advised by Prof. Dennis McCann [religion 1976–80].
Niall received a master’s degree in ancient Near Eastern literature and languages from the University of Chicago, which, as he said, led directly to a career in software development, beginning as a quality assurance lead in 1985. While he knew nothing about the discipline at the time, neither did anyone else. Largely self-taught, he worked in the fields of file conversion, natural language processing, statistics, cybersecurity, fraud analysis for the mortgage industry, artificial intelligence/data science, fintech, and software quality assurance.
After 20 years in Chicago and 18 in Los Angeles, Niall moved to Palm Desert, where he worked as a consultant. He spoke many languages, including Russian and German;loved literature, especially Russian literature; and wrote short stories he hoped to have published.
“I didn’t know him at 91²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ,” Bruce Weiss ’80 said, “but he was the life of the party among his Facebook friends.”
Niall is survived by his brother, Sean Lynch, and his sister, Leslie Lynch.