Michael D. Schroeder
Assistant Director
Microsoft Research Silicon Valley
Microsoft Corp.Michael D. Schroeder joined
Microsoft Research in August 2001 as assistant director
of the Microsoft Research Silicon Valley lab. His
current technical focus is on distributed storage
systems.
Schroeder has been a faculty member of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and a
researcher at the Computer Science Laboratory of Xerox
Corp.’s Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) and at the
Compaq Systems Research Center, where he was also
associate director.
He has worked on time-sharing, computer security,
distributed e-mail systems, remote procedure call,
switch-based local area networks, large-scale naming
systems, global cluster file systems, and Web-based
access to personal information. He was co-inventor of
the Needham-Schroeder authentication protocol, and a
designer and builder of the Multics time-sharing system,
the Grapevine distributed e-mail system, the Cedar
distributed file system, the Topaz distributed operating
system, the Autonet and AN2 switch-based LANs, and the
Pachyderm Web-based e-mail system.
He received his bachelor of science degree from
Washington State University, and a master of science
degree and a doctorate in computer science from MIT. He
holds a number of patents on switch-based LANs and
Web-based e-mail systems. He is a fellow of the
Association for Computing Machinery and has been general
chairman and program committee member for various SIGOPS
Symposia on Operating Systems Principles. Recently he
has been involved in technical outreach activities
exploring the impact of the Web on the methodology of
art history through his online catalog raisonné of the
American artist Gilbert Munger (http://gilbertmunger.org). |
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