Matei Zaharia

Matei Zaharia
Citizenship Canada
Nationality Romania
Fields Computer Science
Institutions Stanford University
Alma mater UC Berkeley (Ph.D.)
University of Waterloo (B.Math.)
Thesis An Architecture for Fast and General Data Processing on Large Clusters (2013)
Doctoral advisor Ion Stoica
Scott Shenker
Known for Apache Spark
Apache Mesos
Website
cs.stanford.edu/~matei/

Matei Zaharia is a Romanian-Canadian computer scientist specializing in big data, distributed systems, and cloud computing. He is a co-founder and chief technologist of Databricks, and an assistant professor of computer science at Stanford University.[1]

Biography

Matei Zaharia was born in Romania. His family moved to Canada later and he attended Jarvis Collegiate Institute in Toronto for high school and the University of Waterloo for computer science. While at university, he helped program the 0 A.D. video game. He received the Governor General’s academic silver medal for highest academic standing upon graduation from the University of Waterloo. He went on to study at the University of California, Berkeley gaining a Ph.D. in Computer Science in 2013 under the supervision of Ion Stoica and Scott Shenker.[2]

He participated in programming contests, winning two IOI silver medals in high school. He was on the University of Waterloo team that competed in ACM ICPC programming competition in 2004 and 2005. He won a gold medal in ICPC 2005 (3rd place worldwide), and placed 15th in 2004.[3] Both times his team got a title of North America champions.

In the course of his PhD studies, he created the Apache Spark project and co-created the Apache Mesos project. He also designed and implemented the core scheduling algorithms used in Apache Hadoop.[4]

He received two Best Paper awards at NSDI 2012 and SIGCOMM 2012, Honorable Mention for Community Award at NSDI 2012, and a Best Demo Award at SIGMOD 2012. Jointly with Reynold Xin, Parviz Deyhim, Xiangrui Meng, and Ali Ghodsi, he holds the 2014 world record in Daytona GraySort using Apache Spark.[5] In 2015 he received the ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award.[6]

References


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