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Daniel Siewiorek Daniel Siewiorek
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Daniel Paul Siewiorek (* 2. Juni 1946 in Cleveland) ist ein US-amerikanischer Computeringenieur. Siewiorek studierte Elektrotechnik an der University of Michigan mit dem Bachelorabschluss 1968 und an der Stanford University mit dem Masterabschluss 1969 und der Promotion 1972. 1972 wurde er Associate Professor und 1980 Professor für Elektrotechnik und Informatik an der Carnegie Mellon University (später als Buhl University Professor). Er war dort 1994 bis 1998 Direktor des Engineering Design Research Center und 1998 einer der Gründer von dessen Nachfolger, des Institute for Complex Engineered Systems. Ab 1999 war er Direktor des Human Computer Interaction Institute. Daniel P. Siewiorek is an American computer engineer and computer scientist, currently the Buhl University Professor Emeritus of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. He is a Fellow of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), and American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). He was also elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering in 2000 for contributions to wearable computers, multiprocessor design, reliable systems, and automated design synthesis.
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Daniel P. Siewiorek
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Daniel P. Siewiorek
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IEEE Computer Society Taylor L. Booth Education Award IEEE/ACM Eckert–Mauchly Award AAEE Terman Award ACM SIGMOBILE Outstanding Contributions Award
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Stanford University University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
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Electronic design automation, reliability computing, and context aware mobile computing, wearable computing, computer-aided design, rapid prototyping, fault tolerance
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Daniel Paul Siewiorek (* 2. Juni 1946 in Cleveland) ist ein US-amerikanischer Computeringenieur. Siewiorek studierte Elektrotechnik an der University of Michigan mit dem Bachelorabschluss 1968 und an der Stanford University mit dem Masterabschluss 1969 und der Promotion 1972. 1972 wurde er Associate Professor und 1980 Professor für Elektrotechnik und Informatik an der Carnegie Mellon University (später als Buhl University Professor). Er war dort 1994 bis 1998 Direktor des Engineering Design Research Center und 1998 einer der Gründer von dessen Nachfolger, des Institute for Complex Engineered Systems. Ab 1999 war er Direktor des Human Computer Interaction Institute. 1972 bis 1986 war er Berater für DEC. Siewiorek entwickelte mehrere Multiprozessor Systeme, darunter das Cm* Projekt mit 50 Einzelprozessoren Mitte der 1970er Jahre in Zusammenarbeit mit Ingenieuren von DEC (und basierend auf deren erstem Mikroprozessor LSI 11). Im Projekt wurden viele Ideen über Parallelrechner und deren Programmierung getestet und Siewiorek veröffentlichte darüber ein Buch. Außerdem ist er Experte für Zuverlässigkeit von Computersystemen und beriet in dieser Frage die Industrie. Er war Vorsitzender des IEEE Technical Committee on Fault Tolerant Computing. Er leitete ein interdisziplinäres Team von Studenten und Ingenieuren, das rund 20 Mobile Computing Anwendungen entwickelte (mit Anwendungen zum Beispiel in der Flugzeug- und Automobil-Wartung und Medizin). Er ist Autor mehrerer Monographien, darunter ein Standardwerk von Fallstudien über Computerarchitektur, das er mit Gordon Bell herausgab. 1988 erhielt er den Eckert-Mauchly Award. 2000 wurde er Mitglied der National Academy of Engineering. Er ist Fellow der IEEE und der Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). Er ist seit 1972 verheiratet und hat zwei Töchter. Daniel P. Siewiorek is an American computer engineer and computer scientist, currently the Buhl University Professor Emeritus of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. His research focuses on electronic design automation, reliability computing, and context aware mobile computing; he has also done research in wearable computing, computer-aided design, rapid prototyping, fault-tolerant computing, and computer architecture. At Carnegie Mellon University, he initiated and guided the Cm* project, which culminated in an operational 50-processor multiprocessor system. He has designed or been involved with the design of nine multiprocessor systems, and has also been a key contributor to the dependability design of over two dozen commercial computing systems. He currently leads an interdisciplinary team that has designed and constructed over 20 generations of mobile computing systems. He has written nine textbooks in addition to over 475 papers. He is the former Director of Carnegie Mellon University's Quality of Life Technology NSF Engineering Research Center, Director of the Engineering Design Research Center, cofounder of its successor organization, the Institute for Complex Engineered Systems, and Department Head of the Human Computer Interaction Institute. He has also served as Chairman of the IEEE Technical Committee on Fault-Tolerant Computing, and founding Chairman of the IEEE Technical Committee on Wearable Information Systems. He has been the recipient of the AAEE Terman Award, the IEEE/ACM Eckert–Mauchly Award, the ACM SIGMOBILE Outstanding Contributions Award. In February 2018, he was awarded the IEEE Computer Society Taylor L. Booth Education Award for "contributions to computer architecture, wearable computing, and human computer interaction education through his pioneering textbooks, mentoring, and leadership." He is a Fellow of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), and American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). He was also elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering in 2000 for contributions to wearable computers, multiprocessor design, reliable systems, and automated design synthesis.
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