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  1. 1 de fev. de 2019 · Butler Lampson was born on 23 December 1943, in Washington, DC. He obtained an AB in Physics from Harvard University in 1964, and a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from the University of California at Berkeley in 1967. Currently, he is a Distinguished Engineer at Microsoft and an Adjunct Professor at MIT.

  2. Publications. Butler W. Lampson ( root) The papers and other items are listed approximately in chronological order of publication. Each has an abstract. Nearly all are available on-line at least in Acrobat form. Many of them also appear as Web pages and as Microsoft Word documents. Some have Postscript files.

  3. Butler Lampson is a Technical Fellow at Microsoft Corporation and an Adjunct Professor of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering at MIT. He was on the faculty at Berkeley and then at the Computer Science Laboratory at Xerox PARC and at Digital’s Systems Research Center. He has worked on computer architecture, local area networks, raster ...

  4. Lampson: Yeah. Somebody’s got to look at it, it’s got to be fussed around with, and besides, she says, frequently in the whole of hundreds of hours you don’t find what you want because nobody thought about it beforehand. Kay: You remember Bonnie, my wife, ran a film and video company for ten years. Lampson: Yeah.

  5. Butler Lampson. Adjunct Professor of CS and Engineering. blampson@microsoft.com. (425) 703-5925. Office: 32-G924.

  6. 14 de fev. de 2014 · But at the same time over in Cambridge, Mass., a couple of hundred fortunate folks were comfortably nestled into Microsoft Research New England for a heartwarming tribute to one of the greats in computing history: Butler Lampson. The audience sat transfixed as a succession of computing’s seminal scientists took turns at spinning stories about ...

  7. Butler Lampson November 1, 2020 Abstract This new long version of my 1983 paper suggests the goals you might have for your system— Simple, Timely, Efficient, Adaptable, Dependable, Yummy (STEADY)—and techniques for achieving them—Approximate, Incremental, Divide & Conquer (AID). It also gives some princi-