Bob Braden

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Robert Braden is an American computer scientist who played a role in the development of the Internet.

His research interests include end-to-end network protocols, especially in the transport and internetwork layers.

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[edit] Career

He received a Bachelor of Engineering Physics from Cornell University in 1957, and a Master of Science in Physics from Stanford University in 1962. After graduating, he worked at Stanford and Carnegie Mellon University. He has taught programming and operating systems courses at Stanford, Carnegie Mellon, and also UCLA, where he moved next.

He remained at UCLA for 18 years, 16 of them at the campus computing center. He spent 1981-1982 at the Computer Science Department of University College London. While there, he wrote the first relay system connecting the Internet with the U.K. academic X.25 network.

He joined the networking research group at the Information Sciences Institute (ISI) in 1986, and is currently a Project Leader in the Computer Networks Division. He was named an ISI Fellow in August, 2000.

[edit] Professional contributions

While at UCLA, he was responsible for attaching UCLA's IBM 360/91 supercomputer to the ARPAnet, beginning in 1970. He was active in the ARPAnet Network Working Group, contributing to the design of the FTP protocol in particular.

In 1978, he became a member of the Internet Working Group, which developed TCP/IP, and began development of a TCP/IP implementation for UCLA's IBM system. (The UCLA IBM software was distributed to other OS/MVS sites, and was later sold commercially.)

In 1981, he was invited to join the Internet Configuration Control Board, the organization that later became the Internet Architecture Board (IAB). He later served for 13 years as a member of the IAB.

He has been a member of the Internet Engineering Task Force and the Internet Research Task Force since their inception. When IAB task forces were formed in 1986, he created and still chairs the End-to-End Task Force, now known as the IRTF End-to-End Research Group.

Among his many contributions during this period were:

He is a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.

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[edit] Sources

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