Please meet Greg J. Badros, one of Go2Nets up and coming stars
Young Mr Badros also deserves all our congrads on his recent completion of his PHD and new job at Go2Net as chief technical architectual geek....by the looks of this excerpt from his cv he certaiinly seems to qualify for this job
Education:
1996-Present: University of Washington (Seattle, WA) Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering Ph.D. Student, degree expected June 2000 Advisor: Alan Borning M.Sc. degree received, June 1998 Advisor: David Notkin
1991-1995: Duke University (Durham, NC) Graduated Magna Cum Laude, May 1995 Phi Beta Kappa, 1995 Majors: Mathematics and Computer Science Cumulative GPA: 3.8 (4.0 in Computer Science Major) Course Credits: 43 (about 172 credit hours)
1986-1991: Salisbury State University (Salisbury, MD) (attended as special student while in junior high and high school) Cumulative G.P.A.: 3.925 Credit Hours Accumulated: 40
Job-Related Abilities
In depth mastery of various computer programming languages including:
C++ (since 1991) and C (since 1987) Java (since 1997), SmallTalk (since 1996) Scheme, Lisp, and Emacs-Lisp (since 1994) Perl (since 1993), Awk and Sed (since 1993) Pascal (since 1986), 6502/8502 Assembly (since 1986)
Proficiency with numerous other languages, including Python, Visual Basic, Tcl/Tk, Postscript, Eiffel, Prolog, CLP(R), Haskell, ML, Vax Assembly
Highly skilled with multiple operating systems including:
GNU/Linux (e.g., RedHat) since Nov. 1993 (pre v1.0 of the kernel) Unix, Solaris 2.x, SunOS, AIX, IRIX Microsoft Windows 95/98/NT, MS-DOS IBM OS/2
Research interests include constraints, programming languages, user interfaces, systems design, software engineering, XML, and web technologies.
Professional Experience
March 2000 - Present Go2Net, Inc. Chief Technical Architect Responsibilities include defining and implementing common architectural subsystems, organizing and overseeing code and architecture re-use. Also responsible for facilitating system-level documentation, and ensuring quality design and code-reviews.
cs.washington.edu |