Stuart Cheshire
Stuart Cheshire is a Distinguished Engineer, Scientist and Technologist (DEST) at Apple. He pioneered Zeroconf networking while employed at Apple. Zeroconf was originally released by Apple as Rendezvous, but later renamed Bonjour. Subsequently, he co-authored the book Zero Configuration Networking: The Definitive Guide, published by O'Reilly, with Daniel H Steinberg.
He is also the author of Bolo, a networked tank game, originally written for the BBC Micro and later ported to the Apple Macintosh.
Biography
Education
Stuart Cheshire received his B.A. and M.A. degrees from Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, U.K., in June 1989 and June 1992. He received his M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees from Stanford University, Stanford, CA, in June 1996 and April 1998.
gollark: Gigabit is 125MB/s or so minus overhead, and HDDs can do that fine.
gollark: They did say they're not "super crazy into [it]", so studying it (in the sense of at some actual educational institution) would probably not be a great idea.
gollark: It's more of a vertical integration thing.
gollark: ARMvwhatever are the ISAs, which ARM licenses, and they design cores for running those too.
gollark: It's a CPU architecture (well, series of them) made by the actual ARM company.
References
External links
- Stuart Cheshire's homepage
- Cheshire's November 2005 Google Tech Talk: "Zero Configuration Networking with Bonjour"
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.