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Jon Crowcroft

British computer scientist

Jonathan Andrew Crowcroft FRS FREng (born 23 November 1957) is the Marconi Professor of Communications Systems in the Department of Computer Science and Technology, University of Cambridge and the chair of the programme committee at the Alan Turing Ins*ute.

Contents

  • 1 Education
  • 2 Career and research
    • 2.1 Awards and honours
  • 3 References

Education

Crowcroft was educated at Westminster School and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in physics in 1979 from the University of Cambridge where he was an undergraduate student of Trinity College, Cambridge. He then gained a Master of Science degree in computing in 1981 and PhD in 1993, both from University College London.

Career and research

Crowcroft joined the University of Cambridge in 2001, prior to which he was Professor of Networked Systems at University College London in the Computer Science Department. After he stepped down from UCL, he was succeeded by his former PhD student Mark Handley. As of 2020 he is a Fellow of Wolfson College, Cambridge.

Crowcroft contributed to successful start-up projects. He has been a member of the Scientific Council of IMDEA Networks Ins*ute since 2007. He served on the advisory board of Max Planck Ins*ute for Software Systems .

Crowcroft has written, edited and co-aut*d a books and publications which have been adopted internationally in academic courses, including TCP/IP & Linux Protocol Implementation: Systems Code for the Linux Internet, Internetworking Multimedia and Open Distributed Systems.

Crowcroft has also done research in theoretical network science, particularly in the area of Turing switches, and he has suggested to replace general-purpose computers acting as network switches with specially-built hardware dedicated to packet switching, as well as using optical technology for the same purpose.

Awards and honours

Crowcroft was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2013. His nomination reads:

Professor Jon Crowcroft is distinguished for his many seminal contributions to the development of the Internet. His work on satellite link interconnection techniques in the 1980s paved the way for rural broadband; his work on standards for video and voice on IP networks helped extend the Internet to multimedia; and in the 2000s he founded the field of opportunistic networking.

He was elected an ACM Fellow in 2003, a chartered fellow of the British Computer Society, a Fellow of the Ins*ution of Electrical Engineers and a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, as well as a Fellow of the Ins*ute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in 2004. He was a member of the Internet Architecture Board 1996-2002, and attendedmost of the first 50 Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) meetings.

Crowcroft served as general chair for the ACM SIGCOMM conference between 1995 and 1999, and received the SIGCOMM Award in 2009. The award to Crowcroft was

"for his pioneering contributions to multimedia and group communications, for his endless enthusiasm and energy, for all of the creative ideas he has so freely shared with so many in the networking community, and for always being outside the box".

References