Albert Greenberg | |
---|---|
Spouse | Kathryn Greenberg |
Children | 4 |
Awards | National Academy of Engineering, 2016[1] SIGCOMM Award, 2015[2] Koji Kobayashi Award, 2015[3][4][5] ACM Fellow[6] ACM Test of Time Award, 2015 ACM Sigmetrics Test of Time Award, 2013 |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Networking Cloud computing |
Institutions | Microsoft |
Albert Greenberg is an American software engineer and computer scientist who is notable for his contributions to the design of operating carrier and datacenter networks[7] as well as to advances in computer networking and cloud computing.[2][8] He currently serves as Vice President of Platform Engineering at Uber.[9]
Prior to joining Uber, Greenberg served as Corporate Vice President at Microsoft and acted as director of development for Microsoft Azure, a cloud computing infrastructure platform that coordinates data centers around the world.[2][10][11][12] In contrast to hard-wired computer networks, firms such as Microsoft are turning increasingly to software-defined networking (or SDN) approaches to run its cloud computing networks by managing virtual networks across "millions of servers".[13][14] He oversaw development of technologies that keep the network running in the cloud, so that when component failures happen, software systems pinpoint the failures and "route around the faulty components;" the technology permits data centers to be "software-defined", allowing the cloud to grow rapidly while being flexible to meet changing needs, as he explained in 2015 in eWeek magazine.[15] His research focused on the infrastructure of cloud services, management of enterprise networks, data center networks, and systems monitoring.[6]
Greenberg received his PhD in 1983 at the University of Washington as an ARCS Scholar (Seattle Chapter).[16] He has won numerous awards for his contributions: he is an ACM Fellow,[6] received the IEEE Koji Kobayashi Computers and Communications Award in 2015 for his "fundamental contributions to large-scale backbone networks and data-center networks,"[3][4] and won the prestigious SIGCOMM Award in 2015 for "pioneering the theory and practice of operating carrier and datacenter networks."[2] In addition, he publishes in numerous scholarly journals on topics such as networking and cloud computing.[17] He began his career at AT&T Labs and became division manager for network measurement engineering and research,[18] was promoted to executive director and an AT&T Fellow,[6] and was hired by Microsoft in 2007 as a principal researcher.[6] In 2016, he was inducted into the United States National Academy of Engineering for "contributions to the theory and practice of operating large carrier and data center networks."[1]