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James G Mitchell

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Citizenship
  
United States

Nationality
  
Canadian


Name
  
James Mitchell

Fields
  
Computer Science

Born
  
April 25, 1943 (age 80) Kitchener, Ontario (
1943-04-25
)

Institutions
  
Oracle, Sun Microsystems, Acorn Computers, Xerox

Alma mater
  
University of Waterloo, Carnegie Mellon University

Known for
  
WATFOR compiler, Mesa programming language

Notable awards
  
J.W. Graham Medal in Computing and Innovation

Books
  
The Design and Construction of Flexible and Efficient Interactive Programming Systems

Education
  
Carnegie Mellon University, University of Waterloo

James George "Jim" Mitchell (born 25 April 1943) is a Canadian computer scientist. He has worked on programming language design and implementation (FORTRAN WATFOR, Mesa, Euclid, C++, Java), interactive programming systems, dynamic interpretation and compilation, document preparation systems, user interface design, distributed transactional file systems, and distributed, object-oriented operating systems. He has also worked on the design of hardware for computer graphics, high-level language execution, and audio input/output.

Contents

Biography

Mitchell was born in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada on April 25, 1943. He grew up in Cambridge, Ontario, and graduated with a degree in mathematics from the University of Waterloo in 1966. Mitchell began working with computers in 1962 while a student at the University of Waterloo. He and three other undergraduates developed a fast compiler for the Fortran programming language known as WATFOR ("Waterloo FORTRAN"), for the IBM 7040 computer. The project, initiated by Professor J. Wesley Graham, established Waterloo's early reputation as a centre for software and computer science research by assisting the first generation of computer science majors learn to program. He then graduated with a PhD in computer science from Carnegie-Mellon University in 1970. His dissertation was titled Conversational programming LCC.

Career

From 1971-84 Mitchell was at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center and eventually became a Xerox Fellow. In 1980–81, he was Senior Visiting Fellow at the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory. He was head of research and development for Acorn Computers (U.K.), where he managed the development of the first ARM RISC chip and was President of the Acorn Research Centre in Palo Alto, California.

Mitchell joined Sun Microsystems in 1988 and was in charge of the Spring distributed, object-oriented operating system research in Sun Microsystems Laboratories and the SunSoft subsidiary. He became Vice President of Technology & Architecture in the JavaSoft Division and then Chief Technology Officer, Java Consumer & Embedded products. Later, he was Vice President in charge of Sun Microsystems Laboratories. Subsequently, he became Principal Investigator on the DARPA/Sun HPCS (High Productivity Computing Systems) program. When Oracle Corporation acquired Sun Microsystems in 2010, he was appointed Vice President of Photonics, Interconnects, and Packaging at Oracle Labs. As of March 1, 2014, Mitchell retired from Oracle Labs. He is now on the board of directors of the Curci Foundation, which funds research in the life sciences.

Honors

In 1997, he was awarded the J.W. Graham Medal in Computing and Innovation from the University of Waterloo.

In 2008 he was awarded the Fr. Norm Choate, CR, Distinguished Alumni Award from St. Jerome's University.

References

James G. Mitchell Wikipedia