Todd W. Mummert Carnegie Mellon University Home: (412) 795-8332 School of Computer Science Work: (412) 268-7557 Wean Hall, Rm 4212 email: Todd.Mummert@cs.cmu.edu Pittsburgh, PA 15235 URL: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~mummert Employment Interests * Distributed applications development, high-speed network development and applications. Interest in rapid-prototyping and demonstrations of new systems/applications. Education * Texas A&M University, College Station TX ME in Electrical Engineering, August 1992. Emphasis on Data Networks. GPA 4.0/4.0. * Texas A&M University, College Station TX BS in Electrical Engineering, December 1984. GPA 3.6/4.0. Work Experience * Carnegie Mellon University. Senior Research Programmer, Mar 1988 - present Worked within one group whose overall focus was the use of high-speed communications in heterogeneous, distributed applications. Brief details of the primary projects are given below. Majority of the programming was done in C, though C++, Perl, TCL/TK were also used. o Darwin Jan 1997 - present Currently developing an IP testbed which will allow us to work with QOS guarantees and to reserve computation resources on the network. Initial implementation uses 100Mbit ethernet; will move to an OC3/OC12 ATM network as adapters become available. http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs//project/cmcl/www/darwin/ApAwNe.html o Credit Net 1995 - present Credit-based ATM network. Responsible for the design and implementation of the IP driver for both NetBSD and Digital Unix for an OC3/OC12 ATM board. http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs/project/vcnectar/WWW/CreditNet.html o Nectar 1992 - 1995 Prototype Nectar involved a high-speed HIPPI network. Involved in the development and debugging of the WCAB driver - a turbo-channel HIPPI board. http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/nectar/WWW/Nectar.html o iWarp 1989 - 1992 Primary firmware developer for the integration of a HIPPI board onto the iWarp array. Worked closely with engineers at Network Systems in this capacity. Also added basic UDP/IP functionality to the system. Wrote a chemical flowsheeting application that utilitized the iWarp for developing random process matrix-inputs that was then solved on a Cray at the Pittsburgh Supercomputer Center. o Warp 1988 - 1989 Application development and support for a systolic multi-processor. Primary application was radar imaging for the Naval Air Development Center. * Texas A&M University. Computer System Manager, EE Department, Apr 1986 - Feb 1988. Managed a DEC VAX 11/782 VMS system. Responsibilities included user assistance, software installation and maintenance, billing, backups, some hardware maintenance and system programming. * Boeing Computer Services. Artificial Intelligence Specialist, Jan 1985 - Aug 1985. Determined potential applications of AI for Boeing Military Airplane Company. Took classes at the Boeing AI Center in expert systems, knowledge acquisition, and the possible appliciations thereof. Honors and Awards * Recipient of Rockwell International Graduate Fellowship * Recipient of Association of Former Students Graduate Fellowship * Recipient of Lechner Fellowship (undergraduate) * Recipient of National Merit Fellowship * Recipient of Nebraska Society of Professional Engineers Scholarship * Member of Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society * Member of Eta Kappa Nu Electrical Engineering Honor Society Publications * Todd Mummert, Corey Kosak, Peter Steenkiste, Allan Fisher. Fine Grain Parallel Communication on General Purpose LANs. In "International Conference on Supercomputing". 1996. * Corey Kosak, David Eckhardt, Todd Mummert, Peter Steenkiste, Allan Fisher. Host and Adapter Buffer Management in the Credit Net ATM Host Interface. In "Proceedings of the 20th Annual Conference on Local Computer Networks". October 1995. * Peter Steenkiste, Michael Hemy, Todd Mummert, Brian Zill. Architecture and Evaluation of High-Speed Networking Subsystem for Distributed-Memory Systems. In "Proceedings of the 21st Annual Symposium on Computer Architecture". May 1994. * Harry Printz, H. T. Kung, Todd Mummert, Paul Scherer. Automatic Mapping of Large Signal Processing Systems to a Parallel Machine. In "Real-Time Signal Processing XII". August 1989. References * Peter Steenkiste, Professor of Computer Science School of Computer Science Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh PA 15213 (412) 268-3261 prs@cs.cmu.edu * H.T. Kung, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Harvard University Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences 110 Pierce Hall 29 Oxford Street Cambridge, MA 02138 (617) 496-6211 kung@das.harvard.edu * Clayton Haapala, Senior Network Engineer 2309 Archers Lane Minnetonka, MN 55305 (612) 542-9873 clay@haapi.mn.org * Carl Love, Senior Systems Scientist School of Computer Science Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh PA 15213 (412) 268-8167 cal@cs.cmu.edu