Welcome to the first Wired Smart List. We set out to discover the people who are going to make an impact on our future --by asking today's top achievers who, emerging in their field, they'd most like to have a leisurely lunch or dinner with. So we approached some of the world's brightest minds -- from Melinda Gates to Ai Weiwei -- to nominate one fresh, exciting thinker who is influencing them, someone whose ideas or experience they feel are transformative.

Some suggested names you may be aware of, others might be new. Either way, they're all people you really need to know about. And wired will be inviting all nominators and nominees to a giant dinner party...

Richard Branson -- entrepreneur
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Lesego Malatsi -- designer
Lesego Malatsi has a business called Mzansi Designers Emporium, based in Johannesburg. The company was mentored at the Branson Centre of Entrepreneurship in South Africa and it finds fantastic local fashion designers who are beginning to take their business overseas. It's doing great -- it recently showcased its fashions at London Fashion Week. Organiser Fashion's Finest described the collection as "hotter than hot".

Niklas Zennström -- founder, Atomico; cofounder, Kazaa and Skype
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Markus Alexej Persson aka Notch -- creator, Minecraft
Notch saw a chance to create computer games in a different way, and executed it brilliantly. He does what all great technology entrepreneurs do: think globally, seeing the true potential for an online business, while understanding his customers. He's modest but confident in his area of expertise, and is always engaging. Besides, he is a fellow Swede who is creating an international success story.

Aaron Koblin -- creative director, the Data Arts Team at Google Creative Lab
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Sid Meier -- game designer
As the creator of Civilization, Sid Meier has deconstructed the forces behind historical events and used computer simulation to recreate iterations of those rules and systems in an immersive and engaging gaming experience. Without Sid I'm not sure I would have begun to respect how fascinating our history and our cultures really are; or how much I could really enjoy a good video game.

Geoffrey West -- theoretical physicict
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David Krakauer
David Krakauer is a true polymath, full of ideas and creativity. He comes out of evolutionary biology at Oxford and was at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, for several years before becoming a colleague of mine at Santa Fe Institute. He has written papers with fellow biologists Martin Nowak and Mark Pagel and was recently recruited to run the new Winsconsin Institute for Discovery -- it's broad and trans-disciplinary in outlook, though centred on the biosciences.

Alain de Botton -- philosopher
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John Armstrong -- philosopher
The writer and philosopher John Armstrong [author of In Search of Civilisation: Remaking a Tarnished Idea] is a very bold thinker, arguing that capitalism has gone wrong not because there aren't enough regulations on businesses but because there isn't enough education of consumers. In his eyes, the task is not to ban McDonald's, but to educate our desires so that we might "freely" consider alternatives. This is thinking at once boldly left- and right-wing.

Jane McGonigal -- game designer
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Vincent Horn and Rohan Gunatillake -- The Buddhist Geeks
I'm a geek. I'm also a practising Buddhist. That's why, of everyone on the planet, I'd most like to lunch with the founder of Buddhist Geeks, Vincent Horn, and the cofounder of the Buddhist Geeks conference, Rohan Gunatillake. What's a Buddhist geek? It's someone with an interest in technology and Buddhist wisdom who wants to figure out how to use technology to reinvent a thousands-year-old spiritual practice to be more accessible, more relevant and easier to integrate into our lives. They're asking big questions, such as "How can social media support meditation practice?" "How can design thinking change the way ancient wisdom is taught and passed on?" "Can videogames lead to enlightenment?" I'm particularly passionate about that last question!

John Brockman -- president the Edge Foundation
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Jennifer Jacquet -- postdoctoral researcher
She is intellectually fearless, deeply serious about science, personally effervescent and always curious. Her interests are environmental sustainability (particularly fish), the evolution and function of guilt, honour and shame, and the role of IT in shaping environmental action -- all of which fall under a broad interest in the tragedy of the commons. Penguin publishes her Is Shame Necessary? soon.

Esther Dyson -- investor and entrepreneur
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Nathan Eagle -- CEO, txteagle
Nathan Eagle is not just smart; he applies his intelligence to the real world, with both vision (mobile phones as capital equipment enabling millions of people around the world to become productive), and a business model (get them to collect data and market research for large companies). His company, Jana (in which I've invested), employs thousands and, ultimately, he employs millions of people in emerging markets as market researchers.

Juan Enriquez -- life scientist
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Ed Boyden -- optogeneticist
Ed Boyden's research at MIT founded the field of optogenetics. Now we can observe how a brain reacts as it hears, feels, sees, smells, remembers, loves. But perhaps more interesting, scary and weird is that he's developed ways to promote or suppress memories and feelings by using fibre-optic light. Eventually, people may even be able to upload or download their memories.

Joi Ito -- director, MIT Media Lab
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Cesar Hidalgo -- network scientist
Hidalgo is a young academic bringing economics, networks and data science together to help understand the various complexities of economic growth.

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