Ken Birman

Ken Birman
Born November 18, 1955 (1955-11-18) (age 61)
New York City, New York
Residence Ithaca, New York
Alma mater University of California, Berkeley
Occupation N. Rama Rao Chair in Computer Science, Cornell University College of Computing and Information Science
Spouse(s) Anne Neirynck
Website www.cs.cornell.edu/ken/

Ken Birman (born November 18, 1955) is a professor in the Department of Computer Science at Cornell University.

Research and Publications

Birman's research is mainly on the scalability of distributed systems, security technologies, and system management tools employed in cloud computing.

An ACM Fellow and IEEE Fellow, Birman was Editor in Chief of ACM Transactions on Computer Systems from 1993-1998. He is also the author of several books, most recently "Reliable Distributed Computing: Technologies, Web Services, and Applications", published by Springer-Verlag in May 2007.[1]

Virtual Synchrony and Isis Toolkit

He is best known for developing the Isis Toolkit,[2][3][4] which introduced the virtual synchrony execution model for multicast communication. Birman founded Isis Distributed Systems to commercialize this software, which was used by stock exchanges, for air traffic control, and in factory automation. The Isis software operated the New York and Swiss Stock Exchanges for more than a decade, and continues to be actively used in the French air traffic control system and the US Navy AEGIS warship.[5]

The technology permits distributed systems to automatically adapt themselves when failures or other disruptions occur, to securely share keys and security policy data, and to replicate critical services so that availability can be maintained even while some system components are down. Birman released a version of the Isis technology, Vsync, as an open-source library.

Other Research

Other results of Birman's Cornell research effort include Bimodal Multicast,[6] a probabilistically reliable broadcast protocol, which uses the gossip paradigm; and Astrolabe,[7] a scalable tool for monitoring, data mining and managing large systems.

Selected publications

Selected awards and honors

[8]

References

A complete list of Birman's publications can be found here.

Birman's group has built quite a bit of software that can be downloaded, free (notably his new Isis2 platform: isis2.codeplex.com). A web page describing other available technologies is here.

  1. Birman, Kenneth (2012). Guide to Reliable Distributed Systems. Building High-Assurance Applications and Cloud-Hosted Services. Springer Verlag.
  2. Birman, Kenneth; Joseph, Thomas (Nov 1987). "Reliable communication in the presence of failures". ACM Transactions on Computer Systems. 5 (1).
  3. Birman, Kenneth; Van Renesse, Robbert (1994). Reliable distributed computing with the Isis toolkit. IEEE Computer Society Press.
  4. Birman, Kenneth (1993). "The process group approach to reliable distributed computing". Communications of the ACM. 36 (12): 37–53. doi:10.1145/163298.163303.
  5. Birman, Kenneth (July 1999). "A Review of Experiences with Reliable Multicast". Software Practice and Experience. 29 (9): 741–774. doi:10.1002/(sici)1097-024x(19990725)29:9<741::aid-spe259>3.0.co;2-i.
  6. Birman, Kenneth; Hayden, Mark; Ozkasap, Oznur; Xiao, Zhen; Budiu, Mihai; Minsky, Yaron (1999). "Bimodal multicast". ACM Transactions on Computer Systems. 17 (2): 41–88. doi:10.1145/312203.312207.
  7. Van Renesse, Robbert; Birman, Kenneth; Vogels, Werner (2003). "Astrolabe: A robust and scalable technology for distributed system monitoring, management, and data mining". ACM Transactions on Computer Systems. 21 (2): 164–206. doi:10.1145/762483.762485.
  8. "Cornell University College of Engineering Faculty". 2013. Cornell University. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
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