Flaviu Cristian Explained

Flaviu Cristian
Birth Date:June 25, 1951
Birth Place:Cluj, Romanian People's Republic
Death Place:San Diego, California, United States
Citizenship:American, Romanian
Field:Distributed Systems
Computer Science
Work Institution:University of California, San Diego
IBM Almaden Research Center
University of Newcastle upon Tyne
University of Grenoble
Alma Mater:Grenoble Institute of Technology
Grenoble School of Management
University of Grenoble
Known For:Cristian's algorithm
Prizes:IBM Corporate Award
IEEE Fellow

Flaviu Cristian (25 June 1951 – 27 April 1999) was a Romanian-American computer scientist noted for his work in distributed systems and, in particular, the development of a method for clock synchronisation which bears his name, Cristian's algorithm.

Biography

He was born in 1951 in Cluj, in the Transylvania region of Romania, the son of Ilie and Rafila Cristian. After graduating from the Nicolae Bălcescu High School in his native city, he went in 1971 to France to study at the Grenoble Institute of Technology, in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science. After graduating in 1977 from both the Institute and the Grenoble School of Management,[1] he pursued his graduate studies in computer science at the University of Grenoble, where he carried out research in operating systems and programming methodology, and received his Ph.D. in 1979.[1]

Cristian went on to the University of Newcastle upon Tyne in the United Kingdom, where he worked in the area of specification, design, and verification of fault-tolerant software. In 1982 he emigrated to the United States, joining the IBM Research Center in Almaden Valley, in San Jose, California.[2] In 1991 he joined the University of California, San Diego as Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering.

He died in San Diego in 1999 after a long battle with cancer.[2]

Publications

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Flaviu Cristian biografia. www.referatele.com. ro. February 26, 2021.
  2. Web site: In memoriam. www.computer.org. February 26, 2021.