Samuel Madden | |
---|---|
Born |
San Diego, California |
August 4, 1976
Nationality | United States |
Citizenship | United States |
Alma mater |
UC Berkeley (Ph.D.) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (B.S., M. Eng.) |
Known for |
TinyDB,C-Store, TelegraphCQ, H-Store |
Website | db |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Computer Science |
Institutions | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Doctoral advisor | Michael Franklin and Joseph M. Hellerstein |
Samuel R. Madden is a computer scientist specializing in database management systems. He is currently a professor of computer science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Madden was born and raised in San Diego, California. After completing bachelor's and master's degrees at MIT, he earned a Ph.D. specializing in database management at the University of California Berkeley under Michael Franklin and Joseph M. Hellerstein. Before joining MIT as a tenure-track professor, Madden held a post-doc position at Intel's Berkeley Research center.
Before enrolling at MIT and while an undergraduate student there, Madden wrote printer driver software for Palomar Software, a San Diego-area Macintosh software company. Professor Madden is also a co-founder of Vertica Systems. He has been involved in various database research projects, including TinyDB, TelegraphCQ, Aurora/Borealis, C-Store, and H-Store. In 2005, at the age of 29 he was named to the TR35 as one of the Top 35 Innovators Under 35 by MIT Technology Review magazine. Recent projects include DataHub - a "github for data" platform that provides hosted database storage, versioning, ingest, search, and visualization (commercialized as Instabase), CarTel - a distributed wireless platform that monitors traffic and on-board diagnostic conditions in order to generate road surface reports, and Relational Cloud - a project investigating research issues in building a database-as-a-service.