rfc1336.txt
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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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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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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
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