Dave Clark Biography



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Clark

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Dave Clark Biography
BornApril 7, 1944 (age 76)
NationalityAmerican
Known forClark-Wilson model
AwardsSIGCOMM Award
Telluride Tech Festival Award of Technology
IEEE Richard W. Hamming Medal(1998)
Scientific career
FieldsComputer Science
InstitutionsInternet Architecture Board
National Research Council
MIT
ThesisAn input/output architecture for virtual memory computer systems(1973)
Doctoral advisorJerome H. Saltzer
Doctoral students

David Dana 'Dave' Clark (born April 7, 1944) is an American computer scientist and Internet pioneer who has been involved with Internet developments since the mid-1970s. He currently works as a Senior Research Scientist at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL).[1]

Education[edit]

He graduated from Swarthmore College in 1966. In 1968, he received his Master's and Engineer's degrees in Electrical Engineering from MIT, where he worked on the I/O architecture of Multics under Jerry Saltzer. He received his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from MIT in 1973.

Career[edit]

Dave Clark BiographyBiographyClark

From 1981 to 1989, he acted as chief protocol architect in the development of the Internet, and chaired the Internet Activities Board, which later became the Internet Architecture Board. He has also served as chairman of the Computer Sciences and Telecommunications Board of the National Research Council.

In 1990 he was awarded the SIGCOMM Award in recognition of his major contributions to Internet protocol and architecture. Clark received in 1998 the IEEE Richard W. Hamming Medal.[2] In 2001 he was inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery. In 2001, he was awarded the Telluride Tech Festival Award of Technology in Telluride, Colorado, and in 2011 the Internet & Society Lifetime Achievement Award from the Oxford Internet Institute at the Oxford University.

His recent research interests include what the architecture of the Internet will look like in the post-PC era as well as 'extensions to the Internet to support real-time traffic, explicit allocation of service, pricing and related economic issues, and policy issues surrounding local loop employment'.[1]

Legacy[edit]

Clark has been credited with a popular statement in the computer science realm:

In 1999, law professor Lawrence Lessig stated that “rough consensus and runningcode” had broad significance as “a manifesto that will define our generation.”[3] Clarks new ethos of consensus has become a widely used methodology software development today and replaced a more top down approach that existed in the 80s.

Selected publications[edit]

  • David D. Clark, 'An Input/Output Architecture for Virtual Memory Computer Systems', Ph.D. dissertation, Project MAC Technical Report 117, January 1974
  • L. W. McKnight, W. Lehr, David D. Clark (eds.), Internet Telephony, MIT Press, 2001, ISBN0-262-13385-7
  • David D. Clark, 'The Design Philosophy of the DARPA Internet Protocols', Computer Communications Review 18:4, August 1988, pp. 106–114
  • R. Braden, David D. Clark, S. Shenker, and J. Wroclawski, 'Developing a Next-Generation Internet Architecture', ISI white paper, 2000
  • David D. Clark, K. Sollins, J. Wroclawski, R. Braden, 'Tussle in Cyberspace: Defining Tomorrow’s Internet', Proceedings of SIGCOMM 2002, ACM Press, 2002
  • David D. Clark, K. Sollins, J. Wroclawski, and T. Faber, 'Addressing Reality: An Architectural Response to Real-World Demands on the Evolving Internet', ACM SIGGCOMM 2003 Workshops, Karlsruhe, August 2003

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ ab'David Clark'. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  2. ^'IEEE Richard W. Hamming Medal Recipients'(PDF). IEEE. Retrieved May 29, 2011.
  3. ^ ab''Rough Consensus and Running Code' and the Internet-OSI Standards War'(PDF). Duke University. Retrieved November 17, 2019.

External links[edit]

Wikiquote has quotations related to: David D. Clark

Dave Clark Bio Amazon

  • MIT homepage of David D. Clark featuring publication list, working papers, biography, etc.
  • David D. Clark at the Mathematics Genealogy Project

Singer Dave Clark

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