Stuart Madnick
Stuart Madnick | |
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Occupation | Professor at MIT |
Stuart E. Madnick (born 1944) is an American computer scientist, and Professor of information technology at the MIT Sloan School of Management and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology school of engineering.
Education
Madnick has degrees in Electrical Engineering (B.S. and M.S.), Management (M.S.), and Computer Science (Ph.D.) from MIT.[1]
Career
Madnick is as of 2010 the John Norris Maguire Professor of Information Technology at the MIT Sloan School of Management[2][3] and Professor of Engineering Systems at the MIT School of Engineering.[4]
Madnick has been a faculty member at M.I.T. since 1972. He has served as the head of MIT's Information Technologies Group for more than twenty years. He has also been an affiliate member of MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science, a member of the research advisory committee of the International Financial Services Research Center, and a member of the executive committee of the MIT Center for Information Systems Research.
Madnick is a prolific writer and is the author or co-author of over 250 books, articles, or reports including the classic textbook, Operating Systems (McGraw-Hill), and the book, The Dynamics of Software Development (Prentice-Hall). He has also contributed chapters to other books, such as Information Technology in Action (Prentice-Hall). In 1965, he developed the Little Man Computer model that is still widely used to introduce computer architecture concepts. In 1968, Madnick developed SCRIPT,[5] a text markup language for IBM z/VM and z/OS systems, which is still being used as a part of IBM's Document Composition Facility (DCF) with the current version called SCRIPT/VS.
His current research interests include connectivity among disparate distributed information systems, database technology, software project management, and the strategic use of information technology. He is presently co-Director of the PROductivity From Information Technology (PROFIT) Initiative and co-Heads the Total Data Quality Management (TDQM) research program.
He has been the Principal Investigator of a large-scale DARPA-funded research effort on Context Interchange which involves the development of technology that helps organizations to work more cooperatively, coordinated, and collaboratively. As part of this effort, he is the co-inventor on the patents "Querying Heterogeneous Data Sources over a Network Using Context Interchange" and "Data Extraction from World Wide Web Pages."
He has been active in industry, making significant contributions as a key designer and developer of projects such as IBM's VM/370 operating system and Lockheed's DIALOG information retrieval system. He has served as a consultant to many major corporations, such as IBM, AT&T, and Citicorp. He has also been the founder or co-founder of several high-tech firms, including Intercomp (acquired by Logicon), Mitrol (acquired by General Electric's Information Systems Company), Cambridge Institute for Information Systems, founded with John J. Donovan (its successor corporation was named Cambridge Technology Group, founded by John J. Donovan), iAggregate (acquired by ArsDigita, which was subsequently acquired by Red Hat), and currently operates a hotel in the 14th century Langley Castle in England.[1]
He has been a Visiting Professor at Harvard University, Nanyang Technological University (Singapore), University of Newcastle (England), Technion (Israel), and Victoria University (New Zealand).
External links
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Sharron Kahn Luttrell (July/August, 2008). "The Baron of Information Integration". Technology Review.
- ↑ Christopher Farrell (2009-10-04). "All the World's an Auction Now:The Net makes markets more efficient". Business Week.
- ↑ MIT Sloan School of Management (press release) (2009-08-10). "MIT Sloan Professor Cofounds Journal on Data and Information Quality".
- ↑ Joe Wilcox (2002-04-29). "Microsoft: Call the next witness". CNET.
- ↑ Stuart E. Madnick and Allen G. Moulton (1968) "SCRIPT, An Online Manuscript Processing System". Retrieved 2012-09-12. IEEE Transactions on Engineering Writing and Speech, Vol. EWS-11, No. 2, pp. 92-100.
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