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David Gelernter
Professor of Computer Science
B.A., Yale University, 1976
Ph.D., The State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1982
Joined Yale Faculty 1982
Office Location: AKW 107
Telephone: 203.432.1278
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David Gelernter is professor of computer science at Yale, chief scientist
at Mirror Worlds Technologies, contributing editor at the Weekly Standard
and member of the National Council of the Arts. He's the author of several
books and many technical articles; also essays, art criticism and fiction.
The "tuple spaces" introduced in Carriero and Gelernter's Linda
system (1983) are the basis of many computer-communication and distributed
programming systems worldwide. "Mirror Worlds" (1991) "foresaw"
the World Wide Web (Reuters, 3/20/01) and was "one of the inspirations
for Java"; the "lifestreams" system (first implemented
by Eric Freeman at Yale) is the basis for Mirror Worlds Technologies'
software. "Breaking out of the box" (NY Times magazine, '97)
forecast and described the advent of less-ugly computers (Apple's iMac
arrived in '98). Gelernter's essays are widely anthologized (for example
in J. Brockman, ed., "The Next Fifty Years: new essays from 25 of
the world's leading scientists" (Vintage, 2002), R. Stolley, ed.,
"Life Magazine - Century of Change," (Little Brown, 2001), and
the ACM's 50th Anniversary collection).
He's the author of "The Muse in the Machine" (1994, about poetry
and AI), the novel "1939" (1995), "Machine Beauty"
(1998, about aesthetics and technology) and other books; he's published
in Commentary, ArtNews, Washington Post and many others. Recent talks
include the Bradley Lecture at the American Enterprise Institute, keynotes
at Agenda 2003, Intl. Wireless World, PC Expo, and the 2002 Organick Lecture
in Computer Science at Univ Utah.
| Representative Publications: |
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"Three programming
systems and a computational 'model of everything,'" in Peter
J. Denning, ed., ACMs new [still untitled] Visions-of-computing
Anthology, forthcoming, mid-August '01. |
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"Twentieth Century
Machines," in R. Stolley, ed., LIFE Century of Change (2000). |
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"Computers and the
pursuit of happiness," COMMENTARY, Dec 2000. |
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"Now that the PC
is dead...," WALL STREET JOURNAL "millennium issue,"
Jan 1, 2000 |

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