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  1. Butler W. Lampson (nacido en 1943 en Washington D. C., Estados Unidos) es un científico de la computación, considerado como uno de los más significativos en la historia de la disciplina. Lampson recibió su licenciatura en Física por la Universidad de Harvard en 1964, y su doctorado en Ingeniería Electrónica y Ciencias de la Computación por la Universidad de California, Berkeley en 1967.

  2. Butler W. Lampson: Synchronization: Introduction by the session chairman. SIGCOMM/SIGOPS Workshop on Interprocess Communications 1975: 1-2. [e2] Wesley W. Chu, Vinton G. Cerf, T. C. Chen, R. Stockton Gains, Butler W. Lampson: Proceedings of the 1975 ACM SIGCOMM/SIGOPS Workshop on Interprocess Communications, USA.

  3. Butler W. Lampson é um cientista da computação estadunidense, mais conhecido por suas contribuições para o desenvolvimento e implementação da computação pessoal distribuída.

  4. Butler is a Technical Fellow at Microsoft. He is a member of the US National Academies of Sciences and of Engineering, and holds honorary ScD’s from ETH Zurich and the University of Bologna. He received the ACM Software Systems Award for the Alto, the IEEE’s Computer Pioneer award and von Neumann Medal, the Turing Award, and the NAE’s ...

  5. Butler Lampson is a retired technical fellow at Microsoft Corp. 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 ...

  6. Butler Lampson September 12, 2019 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 effective techniques for achieving them—Approximate, Incremental, Divide & Conquer (AID). It gives a few princi-

  7. Lampson: That’s right. Brock: Yeah. Lampson: But of course, when you ran it, you got to sit at the console of the 650. So it was very interactive, in a weird sort of way. Brock: Well, when did-- so, at that time, while you were-- so, and your association with computers then continued as an undergraduate? Lampson: It did. Brock: Yes. Lampson: