Peter G. Gyarmati

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Peter G. Gyarmati (born July 14, 1941) is a software engineer and computer scientist, best-known for the development of OS/360+HASP for the System/360, then later the OS/VS for the System/370, especially the resource allocation system. He introduced here the adaptive allocation strategy based on his earlier engineering works.

Born in Budapest, Hungary there he received BSc (Eng) from the Budapesti Műszaki Egyetem, Hungary and MSc from Manchester University, England in 1972, and he received a PhD in Applied Computer Science from ELTE (Eötvös Lóránd Tudomány Egyetem) in 1981.

After their earlier work with Ferranti, then the successor ICL, in Manchester University he joined for research to IBM from 1972 until 1981, working in Poughkeepsie, Yorktown, New York, and the Delft University, Holland.

In his PhD work – Adaptive Controls in Operating Systems — proposed the so called ADIOS solution, extension to the System/370 family, with the OS/VS2 software.

Actively studied the ALOHA-type networks suggested solution to the collision problem and gave a prove for the radiocommunication channel capacity. Now the everywhere used CSMA/CD protocol –an essential for the Ethernet-- based on his work.

Returning to Hungary turned for the new growing world of the PC and microcomputing, where introduced the forerunner of the portable computer, a portable datacollector machine, called MOBI-X, then MOBI-2000. By this work he designed and created the portable operating system –patented--, which is now the core of the such machines, palmtops, etc.

Later he worked with networking reliability, security, in Vienna, and Stuttgart and also Budapest for BSB, TCC and joined to some project in Stanford University, Palo Alto, U.S. as a guest professor, and as emeritus returned to Szentendre, where he lives now, and probably working on. He is member of the PhD body of the HAS (Hungarian Academy of Sciences) and of the Bólyai Society of Mathematics.

[edit] Bibliography

  • P.G. Gyarmati: A short summary of the OS/VS1 operating System. International Education Institute for Computers, 1976., Handbook for students.
  • P.G. Gyarmati: Adaptive Controls in Operating Systems (ADIOS), 1981., ELTE, MIT Papers.
  • Radiocommunication networks, a study of the capacity in relation of a collision detection., IRIA-Laboria, 1980.
  • Portable datacollection systems., DataCommunications, 1985.
  • A short story of the computers., 1997., Stanford.

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