Colin Thomas Johnson, better known by his nom de plume Mudrooroo, was a novelist, poet, essayist and playwright. He has been described as one of the most enigmatic literary figures of Australia and his many works are centred on Australian Aboriginal characters and Aboriginal topics.
Muhamed Filipović was a Bosnian academic, writer, essayist, theorist and philosopher. As a young man he took part in the communist takeover of power and Yugoslav Partisans in 1945. He worked as a professor at the Faculty of Philosophy at the University of Sarajevo.
Muhammad Ali Mazidi was an Iranian electrical engineer and lecturer. Mazidi went to Tabriz University and held master's degrees from both Southern Methodist University and the University of Texas at Dallas. He founded MicroDigitalEd and taught microprocessor-based system design. He was also a scholar of and occasional lecturer on the Baháʼí Faith. He had authored/co-authored several books, available from Prentice Hall and Amazon Kindle:80X86 IBM PC and Compatible Computers: Assembly Language, Design, and Interfacing Volumes I & II, Prentice Hall (ISBN 0-13-061775-X)
x86 PC: Assembly Language, Design, and Interfacing, Prentice Hall (ISBN 0-13-502648-2)
8051 Microcontroller and Embedded Systems, Prentice Hall (ISBN 0-13-119402-X)
PIC Microcontroller and Embedded Systems, Prentice Hall (ISBN 0-13-119404-6)
HCS12 Microcontroller and Embedded Systems, Prentice Hall (ISBN 0-13-607229-1)
AVR Microcontroller and Embedded Systems, Prentice Hall (ISBN 0-13-800331-9)
ARM Assembly Language Programming & Architecture, Amazon Kindle
TI ARM Peripherals Programming and Interfacing, Amazon Kindle
Freescale ARM Cortex-M Embedded Programming, Amazon Kindle
Muḥammad al-Muwayliḥī was an Egyptian author and journalist of the Nahda. He edited Misbah ash-Sharq and published Fatra Min az-Zamān, a serialized literary work of social and political satire, compiled and published as a book entitled Hadith Isa bin Hisham in 1907.
Muhammad Husain Azad was a scholar and an Urdu writer who wrote both prose and poetry, but he is mostly remembered for his prose. His best known work is Aab-e-Hayat.
Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn ʿAmmār ibn al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAmmār al-Quḍā'ī, known as Ibn Ammar, in Spanish sources found as Abenámar, was an Arab poet from Silves.
Muhammad ibn Hani al-Andalusi al-Azdi,, usually called Ibn Hani, was the chief court poet to the Fatimid Caliph al-Mu'izz. Most of his collected poems are in praise of the Fatimids against the claims of the Abbasids and the Umayyads of Spain. He was also called al-Mutanabbi of the West by many of his contemporaries as well as later historians. Ibn Hani was murdered on his way from Egypt in c. 973.