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- Network Working Group G. Malkin
- Request for Comments: 1336 Xylogics
- FYI: 9 May 1992
- Obsoletes: RFC 1251
-
-
- Who's Who in the Internet
- Biographies of IAB, IESG and IRSG Members
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
- not specify any standard. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
- Abstract
-
- This FYI RFC contains biographical information about members of the
- Internet Activities Board (IAB), the Internet Engineering Steering
- Group (IESG) of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), and the
- the Internet Research Steering Group (IRSG) of the Internet Research
- Task Force (IRTF).
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1. Introduction.................................................... 2
- 2. Acknowledgements................................................ 2
- 3. Request for Biographies......................................... 2
- 4. Biographies
- 4.1 Philip Almquist............................................ 3
- 4.2 Robert Braden.............................................. 4
- 4.3 Hans-Werner Braun.......................................... 6
- 4.4 Ross Callon................................................10
- 4.5 Vinton Cerf................................................11
- 4.6 Noel Chiappa...............................................13
- 4.7 A. Lyman Chapin............................................14
- 4.8 David Clark................................................15
- 4.9 Stephen Crocker............................................15
- 4.10 James R. Davin.............................................18
- 4.11 Deborah Estrin.............................................18
- 4.12 Russell Hobby..............................................20
- 4.13 Christian Huitema..........................................20
- 4.14 Erik Huizer................................................21
- 4.15 Stephen Kent...............................................23
- 4.16 Anthony G. Lauck...........................................23
- 4.17 Barry Leiner...............................................25
- 4.18 Daniel C. Lynch............................................26
- 4.19 David M. Piscitello........................................27
- 4.20 Jonathan B. Postel.........................................29
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- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
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- 4.21 Joyce K. Reynolds..........................................30
- 4.22 Michael Schwartz...........................................31
- 4.23 Bernhard Stockman..........................................32
- 4.24 Gregory Vaudreuil..........................................32
- 5. Security Considerations.........................................33
- 6. Author's Address................................................33
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- There are thousands of networks in the internet. There are tens of
- thousands of host machines. There are hundreds of thousands of
- users. It takes a great deal of effort to manage the resources and
- protocols which make the Internet possible. Sites may have people
- who get paid to manage their hardware and software. But the
- infrastructure of the Internet is managed by volunteers who spend
- considerable portions of their valued time to keep the people
- connected.
-
- Hundreds of people attend the three IETF meetings each year. They
- represent the government, the military, research institutions,
- educational institutions, and vendors from all over the world. Most
- of them are volunteers; people who attend the meetings to learn and
- to contribute what they know. There are a few very special people
- who deserve special notice. These are the people who sit on the IAB,
- IESG, and IRSG. Not only do they spend time at the meetings, but
- they spend additional time to organize them. They are the IETF's
- interface to other standards bodies and to the funding institutions.
- Without them, the IETF, indeed the whole Internet, would not be
- possible.
-
- 2. Acknowledgements
-
- In addition to the people who took the time to write their
- biographies so that I could compile them into this FYI RFC, I would
- like to give special thanks to Joyce K. Reynolds (whose biography is
- in here) for her help in creating the biography request message and
- for being such a good sounding board for me.
-
- 3. Request for Biographies
-
- In mid-February 1991, I sent the following message to the members of
- the IAB, IESG and IRSG. It is their responses to this message that I
- have compiled in this FYI RFC.
-
- The ARPANET is 20 years old. The next meeting of the IETF in St.
- Louis this coming March will be the 20th plenary. It is a good
- time to credit the people who help make the Internet possible. I
- am sending this request to the current members of the IAB, the
-
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- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
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- IRSG, and the IESG. At some future time, I would like to expand
- the number of people to be included. For now, however, I am
- limiting inclusion to members of the groups listed above.
-
- I would like to ask you to submit to me your biography. I intend
- to compile the bios submitted into an FYI RFC to be published
- before the next IETF meeting. In order to maintain some
- consistency, I would like to have the bios contain three
- paragraphs. The first paragraph should contain your bio, second
- should be your school affiliation & other interests, and the third
- should contain your opinion of how the Internet has grown. Of
- course, if there is anything else you would like to say, please
- feel free. The object is to let the very large user community
- know about the people who give them what they have.
-
- 4. Biographies
-
- The biographies are in alphabetical order. The contents have not
- been edited; only the formating has been changed.
-
- 4.1 Philip Almquist, IETF Internet Area Co-director
-
- Philip Almquist is an independent consultant based in San
- Francisco. He has worked on a variety of projects, but is
- perhaps best known as the network designer for INTEROP '88
- and INTEROP '89.
-
- His career began at Carnegie-Mellon University in 1980, where
- he worked on compilers and operating systems. His initial
- introduction to networking was analyzing crash dumps from
- TOPS-20 systems running beta test versions of DECNET. He
- later became involved in early planning for CMU's transition
- from DECNet to TCP/IP and for network-based software support
- for the hundreds of PC's that CMU was then planning to
- acquire.
-
- Philip moved to Stanford University in 1983, where he played
- a key role in the evolution of Stanford's network from a
- small system built out of donated equipment by graduate
- students to today's production quality network which extends
- into virtually every corner of the University. As Stanford's
- first "hostmaster", he invented Stanford's distributed host
- registration system and led Stanford's deployment of the
- Domain Name System. He also did substantial work on the
- Stanford homebrew router software (now sold commercially by
- cisco Systems) and oversaw some early experiments in network
- management.
-
-
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- Also, while with Stanford, Philip was a primary contributor
- to BARRNet and its short-lived predecessor, the BayBridge
- Network. He brought up the first BARRNet link, and was
- heavily involved in the day-to-day operation of BARRNet for
- several years.
-
- In 1988, Philip gave up his responsibilities for the Stanford
- network in order to start his consulting business. He
- remained with BARRNet on a part-time basis until October
- 1991, devoting himself to BARRNet planning and to chairing
- its technical oversight committee.
-
- Philip has been an active participant in the IETF since about
- 1987, when he became a charter member of the IETF's Network
- Management Working Group. He is one of the authors of the
- Host Requirements specification, and served a brief term as
- chair of the Domain Name System Working Group. He is
- currently chairs of the Router Requirements Working Group.
-
- 4.2 Robert Braden, IAB Executive Director, IRSG Member
-
- Bob Braden joined the networking research group at ISI in
- 1986. Since then, he has been supported by NSF for research
- concerning NSFnet, and by DARPA for protocol research. Tasks
- have included designing the statspy program for collecting
- NSFnet statistics, editing the Host Requirements RFCs, and
- coordinating the DARPA Research Testbed network DARTnet. His
- research interests generally include end-to-end protocols,
- especially in the transport and network (Internet) layers.
-
- Braden came to ISI from UCLA, where he had worked 16 of the
- preceding 18 years for the campus computing center. There he
- had technical responsibility for attaching the first
- supercomputer (IBM 360/91) to the ARPAnet, beginning in 1970.
- Braden was active in the ARPAnet Network Working Group,
- contributing to the design of the FTP protocol in particular.
- In 1975, he began to receive direct DARPA funding for
- installing the 360/91 as a "tool-bearing host" in the
- National Software Works. In 1978, he became a member of the
- TCP Internet Working Group and began developing a TCP/IP
- implementation for the IBM system. As a result, UCLA's
- 360/91 was one of the ARPAnet host systems that replaced NCP
- by TCP/IP in the big changeover of January 1983. The UCLA
- package of ARPAnet host software, including Braden's TCP/IP
- code, was distributed to other OS/MVS sites and was later
- sold commercially.
-
- Braden spent 1981-1982 in the Computer Science Department of
-
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- University College London. At that time, he wrote the first
- Telnet/XXX relay system connecting the Internet with the UK
- academic X.25 network. In 1981, Braden was invited to join
- the ICCB, an organization that became the IAB, and has been
- an IAB member ever since. When IAB task forces were formed
- in 1986, he created and still chairs the End-to-End Task
- Force (now Research Group).
-
- Braden has been in the computer field for 40 years this year.
- Prior to UCLA, he worked at Stanford and at Carnegie Tech.
- He has taught programming and operating systems courses at
- Carnegie Tech, Stanford, and UCLA. He received a Bachelor of
- Engineering Physics from Cornell in 1957, and an MS in
- Physics from Stanford in 1962.
-
- ------------
-
- Regardless of the ancient Chinese curse, living through
- interesting times is not always bad.
-
- For me, participation in the development of the ARPAnet and
- the Internet protocols has been very exciting. One important
- reason it worked, I believe, is that there were a lot of very
- bright people all working more or less in the same direction,
- led by some very wise people in the funding agency. The
- result was to create a community of network researchers who
- believed strongly that collaboration is more powerful than
- competition among researchers. I don't think any other model
- would have gotten us where we are today. This world view
- persists in the IAB, and is reflected in the informal
- structure of the IAB, IETF, and IRTF.
-
- Nevertheless, with growth and success (plus subtle policy
- shifts in Washington), the prevailing mode may be shifting
- towards competition, both commercial and academic. To
- develop protocols in a commercially competitive world, you
- need elaborate committee structures and rules. The action
- then shifts to the large companies, away from small companies
- and universities. In an academically competitive world, you
- don't develop any (useful) protocols; you get 6 different
- protocols for the same objective, each with its research
- paper (which is the "real" output). This results in
- efficient production of research papers, but it may not
- result in the kind of intellectual consensus necessary to
- create good and useful communication protocols.
-
- Being a member of the IAB is sometimes very frustrating. For
- some years now we have been painfully aware of the scaling
-
-
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- problems of the Internet, and since 1982 have lived through a
- series of mini-disasters as various limits have been
- exceeded. We have been saying that "getting big" is probably
- a more urgent (and perhaps more difficult) research problem
- than "getting fast", but it seems difficult to persuade
- people of the importance of launching the kind of research
- program we think is necessary to learn how to deal with
- Internet growth.
-
- It is very hard to figure out when the exponential growth is
- likely to stop, or when, if ever, the fundamental
- architectural model of the Internet will be so out of kilter
- with reality that it will cease be useful. Ask me again in
- ten years.
-
- 4.3 Hans-Werner Braun, IAB Member
-
- Hans-Werner Braun joined the San Diego Supercomputer Center
- as a Principal Scientist in January 1991. In his initial
- major responsibility as Co-Principal Investigator of, and
- Executive Committee member on the CASA gigabit network
- research project he is working on networking efforts beyond
- the problems of todays computer networking infrastructure.
- Between April 1983 and January 1991 he worked at the
- University of Michigan and focused on operational
- infrastructure for the Merit Computer Network and the
- University of Michigan's Information Technology Division.
- Starting out with the networking infrastructure within the
- State of Michigan he started to investigate into TCP/IP
- protocols and became very involved in the early stages of the
- NSFNET networking efforts. He was Principal Investigator on
- the NSFNET backbone project since the NSFNET award went to
- Merit in November 1987 and managed Merit's Internet
- Engineering group. Between April 1978 and April 1983 Hans-
- Werner Braun worked at the Regional Computing Center of the
- University of Cologne in West Germany on network engineering
- responsibilities for the regional and local network.
-
- In March 1978 Hans-Werner Braun graduated in West Germany and
- holds a Diploma in Engineering with a major in Information
- Processing. He is a member of the Association of Computing
- Machinery (ACM) and its Special Interest Group on
- Communications, the Institute of Electrical and Electronical
- Engineers (IEEE) as well as the IEEE Computer Society and the
- IEEE Communications Society and the American Association for
- the Advancement of Science. He was a member of the National
- Science Foundation's Network Program Advisory Group (NPAG)
- and in particular its Technical Committee (NPAG-TC) between
-
-
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- November 1986 and late 1987, at which time the NPAG got
- resolved. He also chaired the Technical Committee of the
- National Science Foundation's Network Program Advisory Group
- (NPAG-TC) starting in February 1987. Prior to the
- organizational change of the JvNCnet he participated in the
- JvNCnet Network Technical Advisory Committee (NTAC) of the
- John von Neumann National Supercomputer Center. While working
- as Principal Investigator on the NSFNET project at Merit, he
- chaired the NSFNET Network Technical Committee, created to
- aid Merit with the NSFNET project. Hans-Werner Braun is a
- member of the Engineering Planning Group of the Federal
- Networking Council (FEPG) since its beginnings in early 1989,
- a member of the Internet Activities Board (IAB), the Internet
- Engineering Task Force. He had participated in an earlier,
- informal, version of the Internet Engineering Steering Group
- and the then existing Internet Architecture Task Force. While
- at Merit, Hans-Werner Braun was also Principal Investigator
- on NSF projects for the "Implementation and Management of
- Improved Connectivity Between NSFNET and CA*net" and for
- "Coordinating Routing for the NSFNET," the latter at the time
- of the old 56kbps NSFNET backbone network that he was quite
- intimately involved with.
-
- ------------
-
- The growth of the Internet can be measured in many ways and I
- can only try to find some examples.
-
- o Network number counts
-
- There were days where being "connected to net 10" was the
- Greatest Thing Ever. A time where the Internet just
- consisted of a few networks centered around the ARPAnet and
- where growing above 100 network numbers seemed excessive.
- Todays number of networks in the global infrastructure
- exceeds 2000 connected networks, and many more if isolated
- network islands get included.
-
- o Traffic growth
-
- The Internet has undergone a dramatic increase in traffic
- over the last few years. The NSFNET backbone can be used as
- an example here, where in August 1988 about 194 million
- packets got injected into the network, which had increased to
- about 396 million packets per month by the end of the year,
- to reach about 4.8 billion packets in December 1990. January
- 1991 yielded close to 5.9 billion packets as sent into the
- NSFNET backbone.
-
-
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- o Internet Engineering Task Force participation
-
- The early IETF, after it spun off the old GADS, included
- about 20 or so people. I remember a meeting a few people had
- with Mike Corrigan several years ago. Mike then chaired the
- IETF before Phill Gross became chair and the discussion was
- had about permitting the "NSFNET crowd" to join the IETF.
- Mike finally agreed and the IETF started to explode in size,
- now including many working groups and several hundred
- members, including vendors and phone companies.
-
- o International infrastructure
-
- At some point of time the Internet was centric around the US
- with very little international connectivity. The
- international connectivity was for network research purposes,
- just like the US domestic component at that point of time.
- Today's Internet stretches to so many countries that it can
- be considered close to global in scope, in particular as more
- and more international connections to, as well as Internet
- infrastructure within, other countries are happening.
-
- o References in trade journals
-
- Many trade journals just a year or two ago had close to no
- mention of the Internet. Today references to the Internet
- appear in many journals and press releases from a variety of
- places.
-
- o Articles in professional papers
-
- Publications like ACM SIGCOMM show increased interest for
- Internet related professional papers, compared to a few years
- ago. Also the publication rate of the Request For Comments
- (RFC) series is quite impressive.
-
- o Congressional and Senatorial visibility
-
- A few years ago the Internet was "just a research project."
- Today's dramatically increased visibility in result of the
- Internet success allows Congress as well as Senators to play
- lead roles in pushing the National Research and Education
- Network (NREN) agenda forward, which is also fostered by the
- executive branch. In the context of the US federal government
- the real credit should go to DARPA, though, for starting to
- prototype advanced networking, leading to the Internet about
- twenty years ago and over time opening it up more and more to
- the science and research community until more operational
-
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- efforts were able to move the network to a real
- infrastructure in support of science, research and education
- at large. This really allowed NSF to make NSFNET happen.
-
- o Funding
-
- The Internet funding initially consisted of DARPA efforts.
- Agencies like NSF, NASA, DOE and others started to make major
- contributions later. Industrial participation helped moving
- the network forward as well. Very major investments have been
- made by campuses and research institutions to create local
- infrastructure. Operational infrastructure comes at a high
- cost, especially if ubiquity, robustness and high performance
- are required.
-
- o Research and continued development
-
- The Internet has matured from a network research oriented
- environment to an operational infrastructure supporting
- research, science and education at large. However, even
- though for many people the Internet is an environment
- supporting their day-to-day work, the Internet at its current
- level of technology is supported by a culture of people that
- cooperates in a largely non-competitive environment. Many
- times already the size of the routing tables or the amount of
- traffic or the insufficiency of routing exchange protocols,
- just to name examples, have broken connectivity with many
- people being interrupted in their day-to-day work. Global
- Internet management and problem resolution further hamper
- fast recovery from certain incidents. It is unproven that the
- current technology will survive in a competitive but
- unregulated environment, with uncoordinated routing policies
- and global network management being just two of the major
- issues here. Furthermore, while frequently comments are
- being made where the publicly available monthly increases in
- traffic figures would not justify moving to T3 or even
- gigabit per second networks, it should be pointed out that
- monthly figures are very macroscopic views. Much of the
- Internet traffic is very bursty and we have frequently seen
- an onslaught of traffic towards backbone nodes if one looks
- at it over fairly short intervals of time. For example, for
- specific applications that, perhaps in real-time, require an
- occasional exchange of massive amounts of data. It is
- important that we are prepared for more widespread use of
- such applications, once people are able to use things more
- sophisticated than Telnet, FTP and SMTP. I am not sure
- whether the amount of research and development efforts on the
- Internet has increased over time, less even kept pace with
-
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- the general Internet growth (by whatever definition). I do
- not believe that the Internet is a finished product at this
- point of time and there is a lot of room for further
- evolution.
-
- 4.4 Ross Callon
-
- Ross Callon is a member of the Distributed Systems
- Architecture staff at Digital Equipment Corporation in
- Littleton Massachusetts. He is working on issues related to
- OSI -- TCP/IP interoperation and introduction of OSI in the
- Internet. He is the author of the Integrated IS-IS protocol
- (RFC 1195). He has also worked on scaling of routing and
- addressing to very large Internets, and is co-author of the
- guidelines for allocation of NSAP addresses in the Internet
- (RFC 1237).
-
- Previous to joining DEC, Mr. Callon was with Bolt Beranek and
- Newman, where he worked on OSI Standards, Network Management,
- Routing Protocols and other router-related issues.
-
- Mr. Callon received a Bachelor of Science degree in
- Mathematics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
- and a Master of Science degree in Operations Research from
- Stanford University.
-
- ------------
-
- During eleven years of involvement with the Internet
- community it has been exciting to see the explosive growth in
- data communications from a relatively obscure technology to a
- technology in widespread everyday use. For the future, I am
- interested in transition to a world-wide multi-protocol
- Internet. This requires scaling to several orders of
- magnitude larger than the current Internet, and also requires
- a greater emphasis on reliability and ease of use. Probably
- our greatest challenge is to create a system which "ordinary
- people" can use with the reliability and ease of the current
- telephone system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- 4.5 Dr. Vinton Cerf, IAB Member
-
- 1960-1965, summer jobs with various divisions of North
- American Aviation (Now Rockwell International): Rocketdyne,
- Atomics International, Autonetics, Space and Information
- Systems Division.
-
- 1965-1967, systems engineer, IBM, Los Angeles Data Center.
- Ran and maintained the QUIKTRAN interactive, on-line Fortran
- service.
-
- 1967-1972, various programming positions at UCLA, largely
- involved with ARPANET protocol development and network
- measurement center and computer performance measurements.
-
- 1972-1976, Assistant Professor of Computer Science and
- Electrical Engineering, Stanford University. Did research on
- networking, developed TCP/IP protocols for internetting under
- DARPA research grant.
-
- 1976-1982, Program Manager and Principal Scientist,
- Information Processing Techniques Office, DARPA. Managed the
- Internetting, Packet Technology and Network Security
- programs.
-
- 1982-1986, Vice President of Engineering, MCI Digital
- Information Services Company. Developed MCI Mail system.
-
- 1986-present, Vice President, Corporation for National
- Research Initiatives. Responsible for Internet, Digital
- Library and Electronic Mail system interconnection research
- programs.
-
- Stanford University, 1965 (math) B.S. UCLA, 1970, 1972
- (computer science) M.S. and Ph.D.
-
- 1972-1976, founding chairman of the International Network
- Working Group (INWG) which became IFIP Working Group 6.1.
-
- 1979-1982, ex officio member of ICCB (predecessor to the
- Internet Activities Board), member of IAB from 1986-1989 and
- chairman from 1989-1991.
-
- 1967-present, member of ACM; chairman of LA SIGART 1968-1969;
- chairman ACM SIGCOMM 1987-1991; at-large member ACM Council,
- 1991-1993.
-
- 1972-present, member of Sigma Xi.
-
-
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- 1977-present, member of IEEE; Fellow, 1988.
-
- ------------
-
- The Internet started as a focused DARPA research effort to
- develop a capability to link computers across multiple,
- internally diverse packet networks. The successful evolution
- of this technology through 4 versions, demonstration on
- ARPANET, mobile packet radio nets, the Atlantic SATNET and
- at-sea MATNET provided the basis for formal mandating of the
- TCP/IP protocols for use on ARPANET and other DoD systems in
- 1983. By the mid-1980's, a market had been established for
- software and hardware supporting these protocols, largely
- triggered by the Ethernet and other LAN phenomena, coupled
- with the rapid proliferation of UNIX-based systems which
- incorporated the TCP/IP protocols as part of the standard
- release package. Concurrent with the development of a market
- and rapid increase in vendor interest, government agencies in
- addition to DoD began applying the technology to their needs,
- culminating in the formation of the Federal Research Internet
- Coordinating Committee which has now evolved into the Federal
- Networking Council, in the U.S. At the same time, similar
- rapid growth of TCP/IP technology application is occurring
- outside the US in Europe, the Middle East, the Pacific Rim,
- Eurasia, Australia, South and Central America and, to a
- limited extent, Africa. The internationalization of the
- Internet has spawned new organizational foci such as the
- Coordinating Committee for International Research Networking
- (CCIRN) and heightened interest in commercial provision of IP
- services (e.g., in Finland, the U.S., the U.K. and
- elsewhere).
-
- The Internet has also become the basis for a proposed
- National Research and Education Network (NREN) in the U.S.
- It's electronic messaging system has been linked to the major
- U.S. commercial email carriers and to other major private
- electronic mail services such as Bitnet (in the US, EARN in
- Europe) as well as UUNET (in the U.S.) and EUNET (in Europe).
- The Bitnet and UUCP-based systems are international in scope
- and complement the Internet system in terms of email
- connectivity.
-
- With the introduction of OSI capability (in the form of CLNP)
- into important parts of the Internet (such as the NSFNET
- backbone and selected intermediate level networks), a path
- has been opened to support the use of multiple protocol
- suites in the Internet. Many of the vendor routers/gateways
- support TCP/IP, OSI and a variety of vendor-specific
-
-
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- protocols in a common network environment.
-
- In the U.S., regional Bell Operating Company carriers are
- planning the introduction of Switched Multimegabit Data
- Services and Frame Relay services which can support TCP/IP
- and other Internet protocols. On the research side, DARPA and
- the NSF are supporting a major initiative in gigabit speed
- networking, towards which the NREN is aimed.
-
- The Internet is a grand collaboration of over 5000 networks
- involving millions of users, hundreds of thousands of hosts
- and dozens of countries around the world. It may well do for
- computers what the telephone system has done for people:
- provided a means for international interchange of information
- which is blind to nationality, proprietary interests, and
- hardware platform specifics.
-
- 4.6 Noel Chiappa, IETF Internet Area Co-director
-
- Noel Chiappa is currently an independent inventor working in
- the area of computer networks and system software. His
- principal occupation, however, is his service as the Internet
- Area Co-director for the Internet Engineering Steering Group
- of the Internet Engineering Task Force.
-
- His primary current research interest is in the area of
- routing and addressing architectures for very large scale
- (globally ubiquitous and larger) internetworks, but he is
- generally interested in the problems of the packet layer of
- internetworking; i.e., everything involved in getting traffic
- from one host to another anywhere in the internetwork. As a
- 'spare time amusement' project, he is also writing a C
- compiler with many novel features intended for use in large
- programming projects with many source and header files.
-
- He has been a member of the TCP/IP Working Group and its
- successors (up to the IETF) since 1977. He was a member of
- the Research Staff at the Massachusetts Institute of
- Technology from 1977-1982 and 1984-1986. While at MIT he
- worked on packet switching and local area networks, and was
- responsible for the conception of the multi-protocol backbone
- and the multi-protocol router. After leaving MIT he worked
- with a number of companies, including Proteon, to bring
- networking products based on work done at MIT to the public.
- He attended Phillips Andover Academy and MIT. He was born
- and bred in Bermuda.
-
- His outside interests include study and collection of antique
-
-
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- racing cars (principally Lotuses), reading (particularly
- political and military history and biographies), landscape
- gardening (particularly Japanese), and study of Oriental rugs
- (particularly Turkoman tribal rugs) and Oriental antiques
- (particularly Japanese lacquerware and Chinese archaic
- jades).
-
- 4.7 A. Lyman Chapin, IAB Chairman
-
- Lyman Chapin graduated from Cornell University in 1973 with a
- B.A. in Mathematics, and spent the next two years writing
- COBOL applications for Systems & Programs (NZ) Ltd. in Lower
- Hutt, New Zealand. After a year travelling in Australia and
- Asia, he joined the newly-formed Networking group at Data
- General Corporation in 1977. At DG, he was responsible for
- the development of software for distributed resource
- management (operating-system embedded RPC), distributed
- database management, X.25-based local and wide- area
- networks, and OSI-based transport, internetwork, and routing
- functions for DG's open-system products. In 1987 he formed
- the Distributed Systems Architecture group, and was
- responsible for the development of DG's Distributed
- Application Architecture (DAA) and for the specification of
- the directory and management services of DAA. He moved to
- Bolt, Beranek & Newman in 1990 as the Chief Network Architect
- in BBN's Communications Division, where he serves as a
- consultant to the Systems Architecture group and the
- coordinator for BBN's open system standards activities. He
- is the chairman of ANSI-accredited task group X3S3.3,
- responsible for Network and Transport layer standards, since
- 1982; chairman of the ACM Special Interest Group on Data
- Communications (SIGCOMM) since July of 1991; and chairman of
- the Internet Activities Board (IAB), of which he has been a
- member since 1989. He lives with his wife and two young
- daughters in Hopkinton, Massachusetts.
-
- ------------
-
- I started out in 1977 working with X.25 networks, and began
- working on OSI in 1979 - first the architecture (the OSI
- Reference Model), and then the transport, internetwork, and
- routing protocol specifications. It didn't take long to
- recognize the basic irony of OSI standards development:
- there we were, solemnly anointing international standards for
- networking, and every time we needed to send electronic mail
- or exchange files, we were using the TCP/IP-based Internet!
- I've been looking for ways to overcome this anomaly ever
- since; to inject as much of the proven TCP/IP technology
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 14]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- into OSI as possible, and to introduce OSI into an ever more
- pervasive and worldwide Internet. It is, to say the least, a
- challenge!
-
- 4.8 Dr. David Clark
-
- David Clark works at the M.I.T. Laboratory for Computer
- Science, where he is a Senior Research Scientist. His current
- research involves protocols for high speed and very large
- networks, in particular the problems of routing and flow and
- congestion control. He is also working on integration of
- video into packet networks. Prior to this effort, he
- developed a new implementation approach for network software,
- and an operating system (Swift) to demonstrate this concept.
- Earlier projects include the token ring LAN and the Multics
- operating system. He joined the TCP development effort in
- 1975, and chaired the IAB from 1981 to 1990. He has a
- continuing interest in protocol performance. He is also
- active in the area of computer and communications security.
-
- David Clark received his BSEE from Swarthmore College in
- 1966, and his MS and PhD from MIT, the latter in 1973. He has
- worked at MIT since then.
-
- ------------
-
- It is not proper to think of networks as connecting
- computers. Rather, they connect people using computers to
- mediate. The great success of the internet is not technical,
- but in human impact. Electronic mail may not be a wonderful
- advance in Computer Science, but it is a whole new way for
- people to communicate. The continued growth of the Internet
- is a technical challenge to all of us, but we must never
- loose sight of where we came from, the great change we have
- worked on the larger computer community, and the great
- potential we have for future change.
-
- 4.9 Stephen Crocker, IETF Security Area Director
-
- Steve Crocker joined Trusted Information Systems, Inc. in
- 1986 and is a vice president. He set up TIS' Los Angeles
- office and ran it until summer 1989 when he moved to the home
- office in Maryland. At TIS his primary concerns are program
- verification research and application, integration of
- cryptography with trusted systems, network security, and new
- applications for networks and trusted systems.
-
- He was at the Aerospace Corporation from 1981-86 as Director
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 15]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- of the Information Sciences Research Office which later
- became the Computer Science Laboratory. The research program
- at Aerospace included networks, program verification,
- artificial intelligence, applications of expert systems, and
- parallel processing.
-
- From 1974-81 he was a researcher at USC's Information
- Sciences Institute, where he focused primarily on program
- verification. From 1971-74 he was a program manager at
- DARPA/IPTO, responsible for the research programs in
- artificial intelligence, automatic programming, speech
- understanding, and some parts of the network research. He
- also initiated an ambitious but somewhat ill-fated venture
- called the National Software Works.
-
- From 1968-71 he was a graduate student in the UCLA Computer
- Science Department. While there he initiated the Network
- Working Group, arguably the forerunner of the IETF and many
- related groups around the world, and helped define the
- original suite of protocols for the Arpanet. He also
- initiated the Request for Comments (RFC) series. A short
- description of the events of that era are contained in RFC
- 1000.
-
- He was a graduate student in the MIT AI Lab for a year and a
- half in 1967-68, and an undergraduate at UCLA for a long time
- before that.
-
- ------------
-
- I've watched the Internet grow from its beginning. At UCLA
- we had the privilege of being the first of the Arpanet. In
- those days, several of us dreamed of very high quality
- intercomputer connections and very rich protocols to knit the
- computers together. Some of the those concepts are still
- discussed and anticipated today under the names remote
- visualization, distributed file systems, etc. On the other
- hand, I would never have imagined that 20 years later we'd
- have such a plethora of different network technologies. Even
- more astonishing is the enormous number of independently
- managed but nonetheless interconnected networks that make up
- the current network. And somewhat beyond comprehension is
- that it seems to work.
-
- How will the Internet evolve? I expect to see substantial
- developments in the following dimensions.
-
- o Regularization, internationalization and commercialization
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 16]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- Standards will become even more important than they are now.
- Implementations of protocols and related mechanisms will
- become more standard and robust. The relationship between
- the TCP/IP stack and the OSI stack will be resolved with
-
- The Internet will become a less U.S.-centric and more
- international operation. Much of the Internet will be
- operated by commercial concerns on a a profit-making basis,
- thereby opening up the Internet to unrestricted use. The
- telephone companies, including both the local exchange
- carriers and the interexchange carriers, will start providing
- some of the protocol stack other than the point-to-point
- lines.
-
- o Higher and lower bandwidths; great proliferation
-
- I expect to see T1 connections become the norm for the types
- of institutions that are now on the Internet. Higher speeds,
- including speeds up to a gigabit will become available. At
- the same time, I expect to see a vast expansion of the
- Internet, reaching into a significant fraction of the schools
- and businesses in this country and elsewhere in the world.
- Many of these institutions will be connected at 9600 bits/sec
- or slower.
-
- o More applications
-
- E-mail dominates the Internet, and it's likely to remain the
- dominant use of the Internet in the future. Nonetheless, I
- expect to see an exciting array of other applications which
- become heavily used and cause a change in the perception of
- the Internet as primarily a "mail system." Important
- databases will become available on the Internet, and
- applications dependent on those databases will flourish. New
- techniques and tools for collaboration over a network will
- emerge. These will include various forms of conferencing and
- cooperative multi-media document development.
-
- o Security
-
- Security will tighten up on the Internet, but not without
- some (more) pain. Host operating systems will be built,
- configured, distributed and operated under much tighter
- constraints than they have been. Firewalls will abound.
- Encryption will be added to links, routers and various
- protocol layers. All of this will decrease the utility of
- the Internet in the short run, but lay the groundwork for
- broader use eventually. New protocols will emerge which
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 17]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- incorporate sound protection but also provide efficient and
- flexible access control and resource sharing. These will
- provide the basis for the kind of close knit applications
- that motivated the original thinking behind the Arpanet.
-
- 4.10 James R. Davin, IETF Network Management Area Director
-
- James R. Davin currently works in the Advanced Network
- Architecture group at the M.I.T. Laboratory for Computer
- Science where his recent interests center on protocol
- architecture and congestion control. In the past, he has
- been engaged in router development at Proteon, Incorporated,
- where much of his work focused on network management. He has
- also worked at Data General's Research Triangle Park facility
- on a variety of communications protocols.
-
- He holds the B.A. from Haverford College and masters degrees
- in Computer Science and English from Duke University.
-
- ------------
-
- The growth of the internet over the years has taken it from
- lower speeds to higher speeds, from limited geographical
- extent to global presence, from research apparatus to an
- essential social and commercial infrastructure, from
- experimentation among a few networking sophisticates to daily
- use by thousands in all walks of life. This latter sort of
- growth is almost certainly the most valuable.
-
- 4.11 Dr. Deborah Estrin, IRSG Member
-
- Deborah Estrin is currently an Assistant Professor of
- Computer Science at the University of Southern California in
- Los Angeles. She received her Ph.D. (1985) in Computer
- Science and her M.S. (1982) in Technology Policy, both from
- the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She received her
- B.S. (1980) from U.C. Berkeley. In 1987 Estrin received the
- National Science Foundation, Presidential Young Investigator
- Award for her research in network interconnection and
- security. Her research focuses on the design of network and
- routing protocols for very large, global, networks.
-
- Deborah Estrin has been studying issues of internetwork
- security and routing for almost 10 years. As chairperson of
- the IAB's Autonomous Networks Research Group she coordinated
- and authored some of the earliest discussions and evaluations
- of mechanisms for policy-routing. She is also one of the
- leading architects of thee Inter-Domain Policy Routing (IDPR)
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 18]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- protocols, in collaboration with other members of the IETF
- IDPR Working Group. As part of the IDPR effort, Estrin
- directed the implementation of IDPR setup, packet forwarding,
- and route synthesis implementations. She continues to
- collaborate extensively with BBN and other IDPR developers.
-
- Previous to her work in policy routing, Dr. Estrin refuted
- the sufficiency of host-security alone, and developed
- mechanisms (i.e., the Visa Protocol) for border routers to
- flexibly and securely protect intra-domain network resources
- without modifying the IP protocol itself. Estrin's Current
- research interests are in inter-domain routing for global
- internets, and adaptive routing to support new high-speed,
- delay-sensitive services.
-
- Estrin is a member of the National Science Foundation's
- NSFNET technical advisory committee and of the OTA
- Information Technology and Research Assessment Advisory
- Panel. Dr. Estrin is co-Editor of the Journal of
- Internetworking Research and Experience and has acted as a
- reviewer and program committee member for several IEEE and
- ACM journals and conferences (e.g., SIGCOMM, INFOCOM,
- Security and Privacy). She is a member of IEEE, ACM, AAAS,
- and CPSR.
-
- ------------
-
- For the past several years I have had the opportunity to
- collaborate in the design of network and routing protocols
- designed to support global internetworks linking a very large
- number of domains (e.g., tens of thousands of networks and
- millions of hosts). Such scaling implies not only larger
- numbers of routers and end-systems, but also increased
- heterogeneity, both technical and administrative. This
- raises the importance of security, resource control, and
- usage feedback (incentives to encourage users to use the
- network efficiently) in protocol design. Whereas much of the
- focus of the technical community has been strictly on high
- speed, it is in the area of large-scale systems that we are
- most lacking in research results and design methods and
- tools.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 19]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- 4.12 Russell Hobby, IETF Applications Area Director
-
- Russ Hobby received B.S. in Chemistry (1975) and M.S. in
- Computing Sciences (1981) from the University of California,
- Davis where he currently works as Director of Advanced
- Network Applications in Network Technology. He also
- represents UC Davis as a founding member in the Bay Area
- Regional Research Network (BARRNet). He formed and now
- chairs the California Internet Federation, a forum for
- coordinating educational and research networks in California.
- In addition he is Area Director for Applications in the
- Internet Engineering Task Force and a member of the Internet
- Engineering Steering Group.
-
- Russ is responsible for all aspects of campus networking
- including network design, implementation, and operation. UC
- Davis has also been instrumental in the development of new
- network protocols and their prototype implementations, in
- particular, the Point-to- Point Protocol (PPP). UC Davis has
- been very active in the use of networking for students from
- kindergarten through community colleges and has had the Davis
- High School on the Internet since 1989. In conjunction with
- the City of Davis, UC Davis is planning a community network
- using ISDN to bring networking into the residences in Davis
- for university network connection, high school and library
- resource access, telecommuting, and electronic democracy.
-
- ------------
-
- I have seen the rapid growth of the Internet into a worldwide
- utility, but believe that it is lacking in the types of
- applications that could make use of its full potential. I
- believes that it is time to look at the network from the
- users side and consider the functionality that they desire.
- New applications for information storage and retrieval,
- personal and group communications, and coordinated computer
- resources are needed. I think, "Networks aren't just for
- computer nerds anymore!".
-
- 4.13 Dr. Christian Huitema, IAB Member
-
- Christian Huitema has conducted for several years research in
- network protocols and network applications. He is now at
- INRIA in Sophia-Antipolis, where he leads the research
- project "RODEO", whose objective is the definition and the
- experimentation of communication protocols for very high
- speed networks, at one Gbit/s or more. This includes the
- study of high speed transmission control protocols, of their
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 20]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- parameterization and of their insertion in the operating
- systems, and the study of the synchronization functions and
- of the management of data transparency between heterogeneous
- systems. The work is conducted in cooperation with industrial
- partners and takes into account the evolution of the
- communication standards. Previously, he took part to the
- NADIR project, investigating computer usage of
- telecommunication satellites, and to OSI developments in the
- GIPSI project for the SM90 work station, including one of the
- earliest X.400 systems, and to the ESPRIT project THORN,
- which is provide one of the first X.500 conformant directory
- system.
-
- Christian Huitema graduated from the Ecole Polytechnique in
- Paris in 1975, and passed his doctorate in the University of
- Paris VI in 1985.
-
- ------------
-
- The various projects which followed the "Cyclades" network in
- France were following closely the developments of the Arpanet
- and then the Internet. However, the first linkage was
- established in the early 80's through mail connections. I was
- directly involved in the setting up of the first direct TCP-
- IP connection between France and the Internet (actually,
- NSFNET) which was first experimented in 1987, and became
- operational in 1988. This interconnection, together with
- parallel actions in the Nordic countries of Europe, at CERN
- and through the EUNET association, was certainly influential
- in the development TCP/IP internetting in Europe. The rapid
- growth of the Internet here is indicative both of the
- perceived needs and of the future. Researcher from
- universities, non profit and industrial organizations are
- eager to communicate; new applications are being developed
- which will enable them to interact more and more closely..
- and will pose the networking challenge of realizing a very
- large, very powerful Internet.
-
- 4.14 Erik Huizer, IETF OSI Area Co-director
-
- Erik Huizer graduated from Delft University of Technology
- with a MSc. in Material Science in 1983. He spent the next
- four years in the same university building a computerised
- creep measurement system for metallic glasses, including a
- small local network for datatransport to a dataprocessing
- system. After getting his PhD, he refused military service
- on grounds of consience (possible under Dutch law). He was
- then charged with doing instead 18 months of civil service in
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 21]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- the computing center of the Ministry of Transport, department
- of Building and Roads. In these 18 months he became project
- manager charged with implementing a Videotex system. He was
- also charged with investigating TCP/IP as a possible LAN
- protocol and X.400 as a possible E-mail protocol. In 1988,
- he was discharged and started to work for SURFnet BV (the
- not-for-profit company that runs SURFnet), the Dutch academic
- and research network. At SURFnet he is the main person
- responsible for development of the network. Among the things
- he worked on are: introducing TCP/IP and associated protocols
- into SURFnet, the connection of SURFnet to the Internet,
- introduction of a X.400 MHS infrastructure and a X.500
- Directory Services pilot. He has been active in RARE WG1 on
- Message Handling Services from 1988 to 1992. Also, in 1988
- he joined the RARE WG3 on Directory Services and User Support
- and Information Services, which he chaired from 1990 to 1992.
- He has been one of the initiators of the new RARE WG
- structure that was installed in May 1992, and that is now
- managed by the Rare Technical Committee, of which he is a
- member. He joined the IESG in November 1991 as area co-
- director of the OSI Integration area. He is married and
- lives with his wife in Utrecht, The Netherlands.
-
- ---------------------------
-
- I ran into the Internet in 1988, and immediately it changed
- my perspective on networking. Working for a European service
- provider I became a playball tossing up and down between the
- Funding Agencies (OSI) and the users (as long as it works),
- trying to be soft enough not to hurt anyone, but hard enough
- to change things in a manageable way. This has resulted in
- my view of networking where I can see benifits in OSI as well
- as in the Internet protocol suite, and where I want the users
- to get the best of both worlds. After years of battle in the
- European camp to make people see the benefits of TCP/IP
- (being called an IP-freak), it was quite a refreshing change
- to join the IETF where I have to battle for OSI (being called
- an OSI-addict). Apart from the OSI integration into the
- Internet, I have set myself a second, and possibly even
- heavier task, and that is to help and move the Internet and
- it's associated structures like IETF, IRTF, IESG, IAB, etc.,
- to a more global structure, reflecting the penetration of the
- Internet in all its forms outside of North America.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- 4.15 Dr. Stephen Kent, IAB Member, IRSG Member
-
- Stephen Kent is the Chief Scientist of BBN Communications, a
- division of Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc., where he has been
- enganged in network security research and development
- activities for over a decade. His work has included the
- design and development of user authentication and access
- control systems, end-to-end encryption and access control
- systems for packet networks, performance analysis of security
- mechanisms, and the design of secure transport layer and
- electronic message protocols.
-
- Dr. Kent is the chair of the Internet Privacy and Security
- Research Group and a member of the Internet Activities Board.
- He served on the Secure Systems Study Committee of the
- National Academy of Sciences and is a member of the National
- Research Council assessment panel for the NIST National
- Computer Systems Laboratory. He was a charter member of the
- board of directors of the International Association for
- Cryptologic Research. Dr. Kent is the author of a book
- chapter and numerous technical papers on packet network
- security and has served as a referee, panelist and session
- chair for a number of security related conferences. He has
- lectured on the topic of network security on behalf of
- government agencies, universities and private companies
- throughout the United States, Western Europe and Australia.
- Dr. Kent received the B.S. degree in mathematics from Loyola
- University of New Orleans, and the S.M., E.E., and Ph.D.
- degrees in computer science from the Massachusetts Institute
- of Technology. He is a member of the ACM and Sigma Xi and
- appears in Who's Who in the Northeast and Who's Who of
- Emerging Leaders.
-
- 4.16 Anthony G. Lauck, IAB Member
-
- Since 1976, Anthony G. Lauck has been responsible for network
- architecture and advanced development at Digital Equipment
- Corporation, where he currently manages the
- Telecommunications and Networks Architecture and Advanced
- Development group. For the past fifteen years his group has
- designed the network architecture and protocols behind
- Digital's DECnet computer networking products. His group has
- played a leading role in local area network standardization,
- including Ethernet, FDDI, and transparent bridged LANs. His
- group has also played a leading role in standardizing the OSI
- network and transport layers. Most recently, they have
- completed the architecture for the next phase of DECnet which
- is based on OSI while providing backward compatibility with
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 23]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- DECnet Phase IV. Prior to his role in network architecture
- he was responsible for setting the direction of Digital's
- PDP-11 communications products. In addition to working at
- Digital, he worked at Autex, Inc. where was a designer of a
- transaction processing system for securities trading and at
- the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory were he developed
- an early remote batch system.
-
- Mr. Lauck received his BA degree from Harvard in 1965. He
- has worked in a number of areas related to data
- communication, ranging from design of physical links for
- local area networks to applications for distributed
- processing. His current interests include high speed local
- and wide area networks, multiprotocol networking, network
- security, and distributed processing. He was a member of the
- Committee on Computer-Computer Communications Protocols of
- the National Research Council which did a comparison of the
- TCP and TP4 transport protocols for DOD and NBS. He was also
- a member of the National Science Foundation Network Technical
- Advisory Board. In December of 1984, he was recognized by
- Science Digest magazine as one of America's 100 brightest
- young scientists for his work on computer networking.
-
- ------------
-
- In 1978 Vint Cerf came to Digital to give a lecture on TCP
- and IP, just prior to the big blizzard. I was pleased to see
- that TCP/IP shared the same connectionless philosophy of
- networking as did DECnet. Some years later, Digital decided
- that future phases of DECnet would be based on standards.
- Since Digital was a multinational company, the standards
- would need to be international. Unfortunately, in 1980 ISO
- rejected TCP and IP on national political grounds. When it
- looked like the emerging OSI standards were going to be
- limited to purely connection- oriented networking, I was very
- concerned and began efforts to standardize connectionless
- networking in OSI. As it turned out, TCP/IP retained its
- initial lead over OSI, moving internationally as the Internet
- expanded, thereby becoming an international protocol suite
- and meeting my original needs. I hope that the Internet can
- evolve into a multiprotocol structure that can accommodate
- changing networking technologies and can do so with a minimum
- of religious fervor. It will be exciting to solve problems
- like network scale and security, especially in the context of
- a network which must serve users while it evolves.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- 4.17 Dr. Barry Leiner, IAB Member
-
- Dr. Leiner joined Advanced Decision Systems in September
- 1990, where he is responsible for corporate research
- directions. Advanced Decision Systems is focussed on the
- creation of information processing technology, systems, and
- products that enhance decision making power. Prior to
- joining ADS, Dr. Leiner was Assistant Director of the
- Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science at NASA Ames
- Research Center. In that position, he formulated and carried
- out research programs ranging from the development of
- advanced computer and communications technologies through to
- the application of such technologies to scientific research.
- Prior to coming to RIACS, he was Assistant Director for C3
- Technology in the Information Processing Techniques Office of
- DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency). In that
- position, he was responsible for a broad range of research
- programs aimed at developing the technology base for large-
- scale survivable distributed command, control and
- communication systems. Prior to that, he was Senior
- Engineering Specialist with Probe Systems, Assistant
- Professor of Electrical Engineering at Georgia Tech, and
- Research Engineer with GTE Sylvania.
-
- Dr. Leiner received his BEEE from Rensselaer Polytechnic
- Institute in 1967 and his M.S. and Ph.D. from Stanford
- University in 1969 and 1973, respectively. He has done
- research in a variety of areas, including direction finding
- systems, spread spectrum communications and detection, data
- compression theory, image compression, and most recently
- computer networking and its applications. He has published
- in these areas in both journals and conferences, and received
- the best paper of the year award in the IEEE Aerospace and
- Electronic Systems Transactions in 1979 and in the IEEE
- Communications Magazine in 1984. Dr. Leiner is a Senior
- Member of the IEEE and a member of ACM, Tau Beta Pi and Eta
- Kappa Nu.
-
- ------------
-
- My first exposure to the internet (actually Arpanet) was in
- 1977 when, as a DARPA contractor, I was provided access. At
- that point, the Arpanet was primarily used to support DARPA
- and related activities, and was confined to a relatively
- small set of users and sites. The Internet technology was
- just in the process of being developed and demonstrated. In
- fact, my DARPA contract was in relation to the Packet Radio
- Network, and the primary motivation for the Internet
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 25]
-
- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- technology was to connect the mobile Packet Radio Network to
- the long-haul Arpanet. Now, only 13 years later, things have
- changed radically. The Internet has grown by several orders
- of magnitude in size and connects a much wider community,
- including academic, commercial, and government. It has
- spread well beyond the USA to include many organizations
- throughout the world. It has grown beyond the experimental
- network to provide operational service. Its influence is
- seen throughout the computer communications community.
-
- 4.18 Daniel C. Lynch, IAB Member
-
- Daniel C. Lynch is president and founder of Interop, Inc.
- (formerly named Advanced Computing Environments) in Mountain
- View, California since 1985. A member of ACM, IEEE and the
- IAB, he is active in computer networking with a primary focus
- in promoting the understanding of network operational
- behavior. The annual INTEROP (conference and exhibition is
- the major vehicle for his efforts.
-
- As the director of Information Processing Division for the
- Information Sciences Institute in Marina del Rey (USC-ISI)
- Lynch led the Arpanet team that made the transition from the
- original NCP protocols to the current TCP/IP based protocols.
- Lynch directed this effort with 75 people from 1980 until
- 1983.
-
- He was Director of Computing Facilities at SRI International
- in the late 70's serving the computing needs of over 3,000
- employees. He formerly served as manager of the computing
- laboratory for the Artificial Intelligence Center at SRI
- which conducts research in robotics, vision, speech
- understanding, theorem proving and distributed databases.
- While at SRI he performed initial debugging of the TCP/IP
- protocols in conjunction with BBN.
-
- Lynch has been active in computer networking since 1973.
- Prior to that he developed realtime software for missile
- decoy detection for the USAF. He received undergraduate
- training in mathematics and philosophy from Loyola University
- of Los Angeles and obtained a Master's Degree in mathematics
- from UCLA in 1965.
-
- ------------
-
- The Internet has grown because it solves simple problems in a
- simple a manner as possible. Putting together a huge
- Internet has not been easy. We still do not know how to do
-
-
-
- Malkin [Page 26]
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- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
-
-
- routing in a huge internet. When you add the real world
- requirement of commercial security and the desire for
- "classes of service" we are faced with big challenges. I
- think this means that we have to get a lot more involved with
- operational provisioning considerations such as those that
- the phone companies and credit card firms have wrestled with.
- Hopefully we can do this and still maintain the rather
- friendly attitude that Internetters have always had.
-
- 4.19 David M. Piscitello, IETF OSI Area Co-director
-
- I received a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mathematics from
- Villanova University in 1974, with a strong minor in
- Philosophy. Disenchanted with real analysis and metricspace,
- I decided to pursue graduate work in Philosophy. Requiring
- significant dollars to attend graduate school, I accepted a
- programming position with Burroughs and assembly/micro-coded
- my way through two semesters of graduate work at Villanova.
- Eventually, I realized that teaching existentialism was not
- the sort of vocation to pay significant mortgage (this was,
- after all, the Carter era, and interest rates were then
- nearly 15%). So I remained with Burroughs, and built
- compilers.
-
- Fortunately, I discovered data communications, then of the
- remote job entry/turnkey form--not quite existentialism, but
- close. Somehow, as a result of agreeing to work on a
- proprietary HDLC (well, IBM had SDLC, so, Burroughs felt it
- had to have BDLC), I became involved with transport and
- networking protocols for something called Open Systems
- Interconnection. Boning up on available literature -- at the
- time, I recall there was some relatively obscure protocol
- suite called TCP/IP, and something from Xerox, and even
- something from Burroughs that seemed to look a lot like that
- TCP/IP thing -- I became pretty excited about helping to
- develop something international and new. I eventually
- transferred within Burroughs to an architecture group, and
- became immersed in network layer protocols for OSI and
- Burroughs Network Architecture. I began attending ANSI and
- ISO meetings on OSI NL protocols; Dave Oran (DEC), Lyman
- Chapin (then at Data General, and Ross Callon (then at BBN)
- and I met one day in a conference room at a DEC location and
- dreamed up ISO 8473 (ISO IP, ISO CLNP); somehow, it became my
- problem, along with virtually everything in the OSI stack
- that was datagram or "connectionless", so for several years,
- I slugged it out with the X.25 community to see that
- datagrams and internetworking would have international
- acceptance. Of course, I was not alone, Dave O., Lyman, and
-
-
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-
- first Ross, later Christine Hemrick (then at NTIA) became an
- OSI version of the Gang of Four in this struggle.
-
- I received my first exposure to the IETF in Boston in the
- mid-eighties, when both an IETF and an ANSI meeting was held
- at BBN, and we shared some insights into routing. At the
- time, I was a proponent of distance vector routing, in
- particular a routing protocol called BIAS (Burroughs
- Interactive Adaptive routing System, go figure how anyone can
- leave the "R" out of an acronym for a routing protocol!);
- later, along with Jeff Rosenberg and Steve Gruchevsky of
- Burroughs (by this time, we were Unisys), I was to introduce
- BIAS as a candidate for OSI IS-IS routing in what I've called
- the "late, great, OSI Routing debate". Radia Perlman and Dave
- Oran introduced what eventually became OSI IS-IS, a link-
- state/SPF routing system. The routing debate was probably the
- highlight of my standards participation, even being on the
- losing side, since each meeting was filled with good
- discussions and challenging technical issues.
-
- Eight years in OSI, nearly all in an uphill struggly, took
- their toll. I began to resent wading through the obligatory
- political purgatory associated with each incremental change
- in OSI, and eventually left in frustration. I also left
- Unisys at approximately the same time, also in frustration,
- to take on what seemed to be yet another Quijotian task --
- help Christine Hemrick at Bellcore bring high speed datagram
- services into public networks, in the form of SMDS.
-
- Since 1988, I've been associated with SMDS at Bellcore, and
- have participated in several aspects of its design, the most
- rewarding of which was the design of an SNMP agent for SMDS.
-
- I'd become sort of a chaotic neutral in the OSI vs. TCP/IP
- debate, and remain so. I think both technologies have much to
- offer. TCP/IP has a better standards development
- infrastructure, and I accepted the position as OSI
- integration area director along with Erik Huizer because I
- believed I could do more for OSI deployment within the
- Internet infrastructure than elswhere. This has been
- rewarding and frustrating. The rewards have come from meeting
- and working with some truly bright and energetic people who
- actually care about the implementation and deployment of OSI
- applications and transport stacks; the frustration comes from
- having to deal with the IP-supremist and near racist attitude
- that frequently arises against OSI in the Internet.
-
- Oh, well, yet another Quijotian task. I suspect you'll have
-
-
-
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- gathered by now that I don't run from a good fight.
-
- 4.20 Dr. Jonathan B. Postel, IAB Member, RFC Editor, IRSG Chair
-
- Jon Postel joined ISI in March 1976 as a member of the
- technical staff, and is now Division Director of the
- Communications Division. His current activities include a
- continuing involvement with the evolution of the Internet
- through the work of the various ISI projects on Gigabit
- Networking, Multimedia Conferencing, Protocol Engineering,
- Los Nettos, Parallel Computing System Research, and the Fast
- Parts Automated Broker. Previous work at ISI included the
- creation of the "Los Nettos" regional network for the Los
- Angeles area, creating prototype implementations of several
- of the protocols developed for the Internet community,
- including the Simple Mail Transport Protocol, the Domain Name
- Service, and an experimental Multimedia Mail system. Earlier
- Jon studied the possible approaches for converting the
- ARPANET from the NCP protocol to the TCP protocol.
- Participated in the design of many protocols for the Internet
- community.
-
- Before moving to ISI, Jon worked at SRI International in Doug
- Engelbart's group developing the NLS (later called Augment)
- system. While at SRI Jon led a special project to develop
- protocol specifications for the Defense Communication Agency
- for AUTODIN-II. Most of the development effort during this
- period at ARC was focused on the National Software Works.
- Prior to working at SRI, Jon spent a few months with Keydata
- redesigning and reimplementing the NCP in the DEC PDP-15 data
- management system used by ARPA. Before Keydata, Jon worked
- at the Mitre Corporation in Virginia where he conducted a
- study of ARPANET Network Control Protocol implementations.
-
- Jon received his B.S. and M.S. in Engineering in 1966 and
- 1968 (respectively) from UCLA, and the Ph.D. in Computer
- Science in 1974 from UCLA. Jon is a member of the ACM. Jon
- continues to participate in the Internet Activities Board and
- serves as the editor of the "Request for Comments" Internet
- document series.
-
- ------------
-
- My first experience with the ARPANET was at UCLA when I was
- working in the group that became the Network Measurement
- Center. When we were told that the first IMP would be
- installed at UCLA we had to get busy on a number of problems.
- We had to work with the other early sites to develop
-
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- protocols, and we had to get our own computing environment in
- order -- this included creating a time-sharing operating
- system for the SDS Sigma-7 computer. Since then the ARPANET
- and then the Internet have continued to grow and always
- faster than expected. I think three factors contribute to
- the success of the Internet: 1) public documentation of the
- protocols, 2) free (or cheap) software for the popular
- machines, and 3) vendor independence.
-
- 4.21 Joyce K. Reynolds, IETF User Services Area Director
-
- Joyce K. Reynolds has been affiliated with USC/Information
- Sciences Institute since 1979. Ms. Reynolds has contributed
- to the development of the DARPA Experimental Multimedia Mail
- System, the Post Office Protocol, the Telnet Protocol, and
- the Telnet Option Specifications. She helped update the File
- Transfer Protocol. Her current technical interests include:
- internet protocols, internet management, technical
- researching, writing, and editing, Internet security
- policies, X.500 directory services and Telnet Options. She
- established a new informational series of notes for the
- Internet community: FYI (For Your Information) RFCs. FYI
- RFCs are documents useful to network users. Their purpose is
- to make available general and useful information with broad
- applicability.
-
- Joyce K. Reynolds received Bachelor of Arts and Master of
- Arts degrees in the Social Sciences from the University of
- Southern California (USC). Ms. Reynolds is the Associate
- Editor of the Internet Society News. She is a member of the
- California Internet Federation and the American Society of
- Professional and Executive Women. She is affiliated with Phi
- Alpha Theta (Honors Society). She is currently listed in
- Who's Who in the American Society of Professional and
- Executive Women and USC's Who's Who in the College of
- Letters, Arts, and Sciences Alumni Directory.
-
- ------------
-
- It has been interesting thirteen years in my professional
- life to participate in the Internet world, from the
- transition from the TENEX to TOPs-20 machines in 1979 to
- surviving the NCP to TCP transition in 1980. Celebrating the
- achievement of the ISI 1000 Hour Club where one of our TOPs-
- 20 machines set a record for staying up and running for 1000
- consecutive hours without crashing, to watching the cellular
- split of the ARPANET into the Milnet and Internet sides, and
- surviving the advent. All in all, my most memorable times
-
-
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- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
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- are the people who have contributed to the research and
- development of the Internet. Lots of hard, intense work,
- coupled with creative, exciting fun. As for the future,
- there is much discussion and enthusiasm about the next steps
- in the evolution of the Internet. I'm looking forward.
-
- 4.22 Dr. Michael Schwartz, IRSG Member
-
- Michael Schwartz has been an Assistant Professor of Computer
- Science at the University of Colorado, Boulder, since 1987.
- His research concerns distributed systems and networks of
- international scale, with particular focus on the problem of
- allowing users to discover the existence of resources of
- interest, such as documents, software, data, network
- services, and people. He is also actively involved with
- various network measurement studies concerning usage and
- connectivity of the global Internet.
-
- Dr. Schwartz is the chair of the recently formed Internet
- Research Task Force research group on Resource Discovery and
- Directory Service, and is a member of ACM, CPSR, and IEEE.
- He received his B.S. degree in Mathematics and Computer
- Science from UCLA, and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in
- Computer Science from the University of Washington. While a
- graduate student, he worked on locally distributed systems,
- heterogeneous systems, and naming problems. Schwartz also
- worked on radar systems at Hughes Aircraft Company, and on
- multi-vendor telephone switching problems at Bell
- Communications Research.
-
- ------------
-
- The growth in connectivity and functionality of the Internet
- over the past five years has been phenomenal. Yet, few would
- argue that the Internet is in any sense mature. I believe
- what is lacking most are ease of use by a non-expert
- populace, and facilities that will allow the Internet to
- continue to grow in usefulness as the network grows much
- larger. When the Macintosh computer was first introduced, it
- swept in an era where "ordinary users" could buy a computer,
- turn it on, and begin working. We need analogous
- advancements in the field of networking and distributed
- systems, to allow people to make sophisticated use of the
- capbilities of large networks without the large amount of
- specialized knowledge that is currently required. I am
- particularly interested in services and protocols that will
- allow people to search for resources of interest in the
- Internet; to collaborate with individuals who share their
-
-
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- RFC 1336 Who's Who May 1992
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- interests and concerns, according to very flexible criteria
- for shared interest relationships; and to move about the
- global Internet, plugging their mobile computers in at any
- point, seamlessly and effortlessly configuring their system
- to allow them to work at each new site.
-
- 4.23 Bernhard Stockman, IETF Operations Area Co-director
-
- Bernhard Stockman graduated as Master of Science in Electric
- Engineering and Computer Systems from the Royal Institute of
- Technology in Stockholm Sweden 1986. After a couple of years
- as a researcher in distributed computer systems he was 1989
- employed by the NORDUNET and SUNET Network Operation Centre
- where he is responisble for network monitoring and traffic
- measurement.
-
- Bernhard Stockman is mainly involved in international
- cooperative efforts. He chairs the RIPE Task Force on Network
- Monitoring and Statistics. He chairs the European European
- Engineering and Planning Group (EEPG) and is by this also
- co-chair in the Intercontinental Engineering and
- PlanningGroup (IEPG). He chairs the IETF Operations Area and
- is hence the first non-US member of the IESG. He is also co-
- charing the Operations Requirements Area Directorate (ORAD).
-
- Bernhard Stockman is currently also involved in the
- specification and implementation of a pan-European
- multiprotocol backbone. He is charing the group responsibel
- for the technical design of the European Backbone (EBONE)
- infrastructure.
-
- 4.24 Gregory Vaudreuil, IESG Member
-
- Greg Vaudreuil currently serves as both the Internet
- Engineering Steering Group Secretary, and the IETF Manager.
- As IESG Secretary, he is responsible for shepherding Internet
- standards track protocols through the standards process. As
- IETF Manager, he shares with the IESG Area Directors the
- responsibility for chartering and managing the progress of
- all working groups in the IETF. He chairs the Internet Mail
- Extensions working group of the IETF.
-
- He graduated from Duke University with a degree in Electrical
- Engineering and a major in Public Policy Studies. He was
- thrust into the heart of the IETF by accepting a position
- with the Corporation for National Research Initiatives to
- manage the explosive growth of the IETF.
-
-
-
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- 5. Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
- 6. Author's Address
-
- Gary Scott Malkin
- Xylogics, Inc.
- 53 Third Avenue
- Burlington, MA 01803
-
- Phone: (617) 272-8140
- EMail: gmalkin@Xylogics.COM
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