Elliot Schwartz

----------------------------------------------------------[ :-) ]--

Elliot Schwartz received the degrees of Master of Engineering in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in June 1999. His thesis, Design and Implementation of Intentional Names [PostScript 4051k], detailed part of the Intentional Naming System (INS), a component of the Intelligent Naming and Adaptive Transmission (iNAT) project at the MIT Laboratory for Computer Science. His thesis advisor was Professor Hari Balakrishnan of the Software Devices and Systems (SDS) group. He is a former Chair of the Student Information Processing Board (SIPB), and a member of Tau Beta Pi (TBP) and Eta Kappa Nu (HKN). His previous employment includes UUNET Canada, where he spent three years as a Network Engineer, and Embrace Networks, where he was Principal Engineer and Chief System Architect for four years. Elliot is a graduate of Earl Haig Secondary School in North York (now a part of Toronto), Ontario, Canada, a `survivor' of the Shad Valley program at the University of British Columbia, and an alumnus of Epsilon Theta. He currently lives in San Francisco, and is a Senior Software Engineer with Devicescape Software, Inc. in Brisbane, California.

Contact info available on request.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Other pages with or by me:
 
New!
Animated Caltrain Schedule
Our garden
My Hawaii trip
Notes from my Internet class
My "Scaled Olympic Results" Page (from Atlanta '96)
King of Spain for Unix Weenies
Cool stuff from the MIT Moxy Früvous show
A Transparent, Platform-Independent Design for Partly Read-Only Portable Web Sites
Urban Studies Gallery
Other people named "Elliot Schwartz" on the web
My Bondage Equipment Page
Chez Camions, my art project, makes Tech Talk: Picture and Article

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Elliot Schwartz / <elliot@mit.edu>/ 20 May 2003