Victor Bahl is a Principal Researcher and founding manager of the Networking
Research Group. He is responsible for directing research activities that push the state-of-art
in the networking of devices and systems. He and his group build proof-of-concept systems,
engage with academia, publish papers in prestigious conferences and journals, publish software
for the research community, and work with product groups to influence Microsoft’s products that
impact millions of users world-wide. His personal research interests span a variety of topics
in wireless system design, mobile networking, and network management.
Some of Bahl's seminal research contributions include:
JVideo
(1990-93), the computer industry’s first audio-video codec & rendering desktop hardware board;
SLIB
(1993-95), the industry’s first universally available software audio-video codec & rendering library;
WiLIB
(1997-98), a general purpose programming interface & library for wireless network cards;
RADAR
(1998-99), the world’s first signal strength based indoor user-location determination system;
CHOICE (1999-2001), the world’s first public
area wireless LAN hot-spot network and edge controller based architecture, and
UCOM
(2001-03), the world’s first multi-radio single network wireless system. He recently worked on
Mesh Networking (2003-05),
a community multi-hop wireless network for residential, city, and rural broadband access. He is now working on
NetHealth (2006-),
an end-to-end enterprise network management system and
KNOWS (2006-)
a hardware & software platform for wireless operation in the TV bands. Bahl’s research has been incorporated
into Microsoft's core products, industry standards, and numerous non-Microsoft commercial products.
In addition to commercial impact, Bahl has had a significant impact on the research community. He has authored
85+ scientific papers,
with over 8100 citations,
and 110+ patent applications of which 68+ have issued. He has
participated and contributed to standards bodies including the IEEE, Bluetooth, HomeRF, and FCC.
His Mesh
Networking Academic Toolkit 2005 & 2007 is being used by over 900 University departments world-wide. The
VirtualWiFi
software has become the 3rd most downloaded software from Microsoft Research with over 80,000 downloads. The
annual networking summits
that he has organized are attended by the leading researchers in the field and their content downloaded by
researchers and students all over the world. He has given tutorials at premier networking
conferences, delivered close to two dozen
keynote talks,
and over 70 seminars
in computer science and electrical engineering departments around the world. His research has
been covered by popular press including,
EE Times,
The New York Times, Seattle-Post Intelligencer,
Information Week,
Technology Review,
DataQuest, Wired News, etc.
Bahl is the founder and past-Chair of the ACM
Special Interest Group in Mobility (SIGMOBILE) (1996-2005); the founder and past Editor-in-Chief
of ACM Mobile Computing and Communications
Review (1996-2001), and the founder and Steering Committee Chair of the first conference dedicated
to mobile systems research: ACM/USENIX Mobile
Systems Conference (2003-); he has served on the editorial board of the IEEE Journal on Selected
Areas in Communications, Elsevier's Adhoc Networking Journal, Kulwer's Telecommunications Systems
Journal, and ACM's Wireless Networking Journal. He has served as a guest editor for several IEEE
and ACM journals on topics related to mobile multimedia communications; and on networking
research-funding panels and workshops organized by the National Science Foundation (NSF), the
National Research Council (NRC) and European Union's COST. He has served as the General Chair of
ACM SIGCOMM,
ACM MobiCom, IEEE COMSWARE, and
IEEE ISWCS;as Program Chair
of IEEE Symposium on Wearable Computers,
ACM workshop on
Wireless Mobile Multimedia and ACM Workshop on
Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks. Dr. Bahl serves or has served on the steering committees of
IEEE DySPAN,
IEEE COMSWARE,
IEEE ISWCS,
ACM SenSys,
ACM MobiCom,
ACM/USENIX MobiSys, and on the
Technical Program Committee
of over 65 international conferences and workshops. He has participated as panelist in numerous conferences
and workshops. In 2006, he was nominated by Microsoft for Intellectual Property Owners Association’s
National Inventor of the Year Award, reaching the final four. He received Digital's prestigious
Doctoral Engineering Award (1995-97) and ACM SIGMOBILE's
Distinguished Service Award (2001). In 2003, he became an
ACM Fellow
and in 2008 an
IEEE Fellow for contributions to the design of wireless networks and systems and leadership
in mobile computing and communications. He is a IEEE Communication Society’s 2007-09
Distinguished Lecturer and
ACM's Distinguished
Speaker. He has served as the president of the electrical engineering honor society Eta Kappa Nu-Zeta Pi.
Prior to joining Microsoft in 1997, Dr. Bahl was with Digital Equipment Corporation
(now part of Hewlett Packard) where he initiated, led, and shipped several
hardware and software multimedia products He received his Ph.D in Computer Systems
Engineering from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.