|
David Stodder's Mission Intelligence
David Stodder is vice president and research director - information management and IT performance management at Ventana Research. He was previously editor-in-chief and editorial director of Intelligent Enterprise. Write him at dstodder@msn.com Thoughts on Jim Gray, Database Pioneer
After a period of upheaval, I'm ready to resume contributing to the IE blog. My thoughts, however, are clouded by news of the apparent disappearance of Jim Gray, founder and head of Microsoft's Bay Area Research Center (BARC). My heart goes out to his family as well as his immense circle of friends, students and colleagues. According to the news reports, Gray vanished while sailing his beloved yacht, "Tenacious" out to the Farallon Islands, located a little over 20 miles west of San Francisco Bay. As many following this story in the San Francisco Chronicle and elsewhere know, a massive, high-tech search was undertaken to find him. According to the search effort site, the search has been officially called off, although friends and family are still trying. I worked with Jim on articles and events over the years with Intelligent Enterprise, Database Programming & Design and our Database Summit Series conferences that we held in the late 1990s. It could've been intimidating to work with such a legendary figure—without question, one of the most significant computer scientists and information technologists ever—but Jim was unfailingly generous with his time. His insights, humor, encouragement and good will are things I will never forget, and will miss dearly. Frankly, it had been on my mind to get in touch with Jim. But in a rush, I was dealing with my own changes and getting ready to travel to India to visit BPO and IT companies Satyam and Sify and attend the NASSCOM conference in Mumbai. I first read the sad news of his disappearance in the papers while en route to India, and followed the story through fellow travelers' mobile devices there. In Mumbai, I lit a candle for him at the Basilica of Mount Mary, where people of all faiths have come to pray since the 17th Century. An ACM Turing Award winner and driving member of the National Science Foundation, Gray contributed more than anyone to the advance of database and transaction processing technology during a career that included key stints at Tandem, IBM, Digital Equipment Corp. and Microsoft, not to mention U.C. Berkeley and other learning institutions. The spectrum of his contributions is amazing; you can learn more about his recent work at the BARC site. His career led us through the arrival and flowering of relational databases, OLTP, distributed transactions systems, client/server computing, parallel computing and through use of commodity platforms, current efforts to bring the power of information to an ever wider array of users. It's just stunning that he appears to have left us. I'll have more to say about the trip to India in a future blog. I'd like to close this one by offering my best wishes to Doug Henschen, editor-in-chief of the new online version of Intelligent Enterprise. I thoroughly enjoyed my years with the publication and CMP Technology, and hope to continue contributing to this important venue as I move on to a different role. Intelligent Enterprise is still the place to be when it comes to finding out about BI, business process management, rules systems, search and other strategic information technology. David Stodder is Editor Emeritus and now Editor at Large of Intelligent Enterprise. Write him at dstodder@msn.com. E-MAIL | SLASHDOT | DIGG This is a public forum. CMP Technology and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. CMP Technology makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers. Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of CMP Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in CMP Technology's Terms of Service. Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.
|
Blog Channels
Cindi Howson on Business Intelligence The Brain Food Blogger Tony Byrne on Content Management SQL Puzzlers by Joe Celko Rajan Chandras on IT & Information Management Seth Grimes on Analytics In Context by Doug Henschen Phil Kemelor on Web Analytics Sandy Kemsley's Column Two Nelson King on Enterprise App Development David Linthicum on Software as a Service Natural Insight, By Mark Madsen Alan Pelz-Sharpe on Content Management Mark Smith on Performance Management Neil Raden on Business Intelligence Bruce Silver on Business Process Management Product Maven Subscribe to RSS Archives
|
|
|












