Forty years in research

How time flies.

I realized this month that I have been involved in academic research for four decades. Indeed, I started getting involved in computer-science forty years ago today. At the time, I was a senior undergraduate computer-science major at Dartmouth College. On the first day of my final term (spring term) before graduation, I started a part-time job as a research assistant to Professor Donald Johnson. His expertise was wide-ranging, and as I recall my task was to write Mesa code for some database experiments using a brand-new lab stocked with Xerox desktop computers. I learned a lot that term!

By the end of that summer I was at Duke University for a PhD in Computer Science. I am especially grateful to my advisor, Professor Carla Ellis, for guiding me through the PhD and for imparting so many valuable lessons, tangible and intangible, that have allowed me a successful career.

When I returned to join the faculty at Dartmouth, five years later, I became a colleague of Don Johnson – my prior research mentor – and Scot Drysdale, the first computer scientist at Dartmouth and indeed the first professor I’d met as a freshman at Dartmouth in 1982. I deeply appreciate their advice and mentorship during my early years as a professor.

Thank you to the many students and colleagues who I’ve had the pleasure of working with over these past decades. We’ve done a lot of great research together!

Duke CS at 50

Fifty years of history.

I was pleased to spend the past couple of days at Duke University to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the founding of its Department of Computer Science. It was a fun opportunity to visit my PhD alma mater, to visit with some of my former professors and classmates, and to hear from some of the impressive alumni of this venerable department.

I was a student of the department from 1986-91, when it was a much smaller and younger department – less than a third of its history had passed when I arrived as a new student. During five years there I deepened my knowledge of computer science, developed into a computing professional, and formed lasting friendships with students and faculty alike. I also met my wife while there; this weekend, we toured some of our old haunts and homes in Durham and Chapel Hill; only one of our homes is still standing, and it looks exactly the same today as it did when we lived there 33 years ago. Lovely to be back!