User:Aswirthm/Robert P. Goldberg

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Robert P. Goldberg
Died(1994-02-25)February 25, 1994
Alma mater

Robert P. Goldberg (unknow – February 25, 1994) was an

operating systems and virtualization
.

With Gerald J. Popek he proposed the Popek and Goldberg virtualization requirements,[1] a set of conditions necessary for a computer architecture to support system virtualization.

Biography

Dr. Goldberg received the B.S. degree in Mathematics from MIT in 1965 and the MA and Ph.D. degress in Applied Mathematics from Harvard University, in 1969 and 1973, respectively. From 1966 to 1972 he was a member of the research staff at MIT, first at Lincoln Laboratories and then at Project MAC. From 1971 to 1972, Dr. Goldberg served as a consultant to the Director of Engineering at Honeywell's Boston Computer Operations.

His teaching experience included lectoreships at Brandeis University and Northeastern University. Dr. Goldberg was a member of ACM. He was the organizer of the Virtual Machine session at the 1973 National Computer Conference, was the Program Chairman and Proceedings Editor for the ACM SIGARCH-SIGOPS Workshop on Virtual Computer Systems, 1973 and has written and lectured extensively on many different aspects of virtual machine systems.

Dr. Goldberg was a member of the Honeywell Information Systems Technical Office in Waltham,MA and also a Lecturer on Computer Science at Harvard University. His research interest included computer architectures, operating system design and evaluation, and data management systems at that time.[2]

1978 Dr. Goldberg filed a patent under the name "Hardware virtualizer for supporting recursive virtual computer systems on a host computer system" (Patent Nr. 4253145) which was accepted 1981 and is held by Honeywell Information Systems Inc.[3]

In 1975 Dr. Goldberg together with Dr. Jeffrey Buzen and Dr. Harold Schwenk (whose last names are represented in the initials of the company) founded a company called "BGS Systems, Inc." in the basement of Buzen's Lexington, Mass. home. Over the next fifteen years, it moved five times, but always within Waltham, Mass.

The company set out to develop products that provided centralized capacity management and planning capabilities for all major computing platforms. In addition BGS created products that managed and evaluated computing systems such as UNIX, MVS, VM, OpenVMS, and the AS/400 as well as OS/2 and Windows NT. By the early 1980s the company could claim over 30,000 installations worldwide with its BEST/1 product. This software, which was based on queuing theory, was devised by the three founders and promoted by the company as being the de facto standard for capacity management and planning in heterogeneous distributed environments.[4] (1998 BGS Systems was aquired by BMC Software, Inc. The transaction was valued at approximately $285 million.[5])

Death and afterward

Dr. Goldberg passed away on the 25th of February 1994.[6]

Published works

References


Category:American computer businesspeople Category:American computer scientists Category:Harvard University faculty Category:1994 deaths