Dave Bakken’s Student Web Page
Potential future students: see note below!
Current PhD Students
- Ioanna Dionysiou (CS), Dynamic and Composable
Trust Management for Publish-Subscribe systems
- Kjell “Harald” Gjermundrød
(CS), GridStat middleware mechanisms
- Jim Kusznir, GridStat topic TBD
Current MS Students
- Rick Grandy, probabilistic multicast for simulation
communications
- Erlend Viddal, GridStat topic TBD
- Stian Abelsen, GridStat topic TBD
Former Graduate Students
- Chris Jones,
MS, 2000, voting in middleware, now at BBN
- Limin Gu, MS, 2000, group
communication and bandwidth reservation, now at Silicon Graphics
- Solve Stokkan,
MS, 2001, adaptive
attribute-based security for CORBA, now at TriGeo Network Security
- Sripriya Vasudevan, MS,
2001, ad hoc mobile protocols, now at Microsoft
- Zhiyuan (“Troy”) Zhan, MS,
2001, Voting Virtual Machine, now at Georgia Tech
- Olav Haugan,
MS 2001, MicroQoSCORBA
Toolkit, now working for Hynomics.
- Marius
Sundbakken, MS 2001, now working with Seagull Scientific.
- Radek Mista MS, 2002, Mr.
Fusion middleware (Fusion Status Service).
Now working for Silicon
Defense, an intrusion detection system and security consulting
company.
- Tarana Damania MS (EE),
2002, Unreliable Transport Mechanisms for MicroQoSCORBA. Now pursuing an MBA at WSU and working
as my research administrator.
- Kevin Dorow (CS), MS, 2002, MicroQoSCORBA
fault tolerance. Now working for Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
- A. David McKinnon (CS), MicroQoSCORBA architecture, profiling, security
mechanisms
- Wes
Lawrence (CS), MicroQoSCORBA realtime
mechanisms/profiling. Now working
for Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
- Eivind Næss (CS), MS 2004, MicroQoSCORBA: configurable
middleware-layer embedded intrusion detection subsystem.
- Thor Egil
Skaug (CS), MS 2004, MicroQOSCORBA:
wireless middleware adaptation mechanisms in Bluetooth, beginning PhD
studies.
A Note to Potential
Future Students
Like a lot of professors in popular
applied research areas, I get a huge amount of email from students hoping to do
a MS or PhD under my direction, mostly from outside the US.
Further, as a rule I do not agree to be an advisor until a student has
taken a course from me and shown that he or she can think “on their feet”, show
good insight into distributed systems, show that they can communicate and
program very well (a weakness with almost all overseas applications, and one
difficult to ascertain from a resume, even with an internship or two). Finally, I do not have time to read these
email messages and just delete them.
So do not email me about graduate studies here,
asking me to put in a good word for you with the admissions committee or asking
me if you can be my RA your first semester here. While for now I delete such messages, in the
future I may (with no warning) forward these onto the committee asking that
this person’s bad judgement in emailing me be a
negative factor placed in his or her application file. So don’t email me
and risk this, please!
(The above does not apply to students recommended to me by a colleague I know
personally.)
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