Lawrence Landweber

Lawrence H. Landweber is John P. Morgridge Professor Emeritus of Computer Science at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

He received his bachelor's degree in 1963 at Brooklyn College and his Ph.D. at Purdue University in 1967. His doctoral thesis was "A design algorithm for sequential machines and definability in monadic second-order arithmetic."[1]

He is best known for founding the CSNET project in 1979, which later developed into NSFNET.[2] He is credited with having made the fundamental decision to use the TCP/IP protocol.

Contents

Publications

He is co-author of Brainerd, Walter S., and Lawrence H. Landweber. Theory of Computation. New York: Wiley, 1974. ISBN 9780471095859.[3][4]

Awards

References

  1. ^ WorldCat
  2. ^ a b "The Net50". Newsweek. December 25 1995. http://www.newsweek.com/1995/12/24/the-net-50.html. 
  3. ^ WorldCat
  4. ^ Review, American Mathematical Monthly, Mar., 1976, vol. 83, no. 3, p. 211-213
  5. ^ [1]

External links