Larry L. Peterson
Larry L. Peterson is a noted American computer scientist, known primarily as the Director of the PlanetLab Consortium, co-author (with Bruce Davie) of the networking textbook "Computer Networks: A Systems Approach,"[1] and for his research on the TCP Vegas congestion control algorithm[2] and the x-kernel operating system.
Dr. Peterson received his B.S. in Computer Science from Kearney State College, Nebraska, in 1979, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from Purdue University in 1982 and 1985 under Douglas Comer, respectively. He then served as a professor at the University of Arizona, and later as the Robert E. Kahn Professor of Computer Science at Princeton University, where he also served as a Department Chair from 2003 to 2009. While at Princeton, he co-founded a startup to commercialize CDN technology developed on PlanetLab that was subsequently acquired by Akamai Technologies. He is now Emeritus at Princeton University, and serves as CTO of the Open Networking Foundation.
He is an ACM Fellow, an IEEE Fellow, and a member of the National Academy of Engineering. He is also the recipient of the IEEE Kobayashi Award and the ACM SIGCOMM Award.
External links
- Home page of Larry Peterson at Princeton University.
- Open Networking Foundation.
- Computer Networks: A Systems Approach.
References
- Computer Networks: A Systems Approach, 5th Edition, Morgan Kaufmann, 2012
- Lawrence Brakmo and Larry Peterson, TCP Vegas: Congestion Control on a Global Internet, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas, Vol. 13, No. 8, Oct. 1995.