Gaston Gonnet

Gaston Gonnet

Gaston Gonnet in 2006.
Born Gaston Henry Gonnet Haas
(1948-09-22) September 22, 1948
Montevideo, Uruguay
Residence Wädenswil, ZH, CH
Nationality Uruguayan, Canadian, Swiss
Fields Computer science
Institutions University of Waterloo, ETH Zurich
Alma mater University of Waterloo
Doctoral advisor J. Alan George
Doctoral students Ricardo Baeza-Yates
Known for Maple Computer Algebra
Oxford English Dictionary Project
similarity matrix
Website
Gaston Gonnet

Gaston H. Gonnet is a Uruguayan Canadian computer scientist and entrepreneur. He is best known for his contributions to the Maple computer algebra system[1] and the creation of an electronic version of the Oxford English Dictionary.[2]

Education and professional life

Gonnet received his doctorate in computer science from the University of Waterloo in 1977. His thesis was entitled Interpolation and Interpolation Hash Searching. His advisor was J. Alan George.[3]

In 1980 Gonnet co-founded the Symbolic Computation Group at the University of Waterloo.[1] The work of SCG on a general-purpose computer algebra system later formed the core of the Maple system. In 1988, Gonnet co-founded (with Keith Geddes) the private company Waterloo Maple Inc., to sell Maple commercially.[1] In the mid 90's the company ran into trouble and a disagreement between his colleagues caused him to withdraw from chairman of the Board and managerial involvement. On June 9, 2011, Gonnet and Keith O. Geddes received the ACM Richard D Jenks Memorial Prize for Excellence in Software Engineering Applied to Computer Algebra for the Maple Project.

In 1984 Gonnet co-founded the New Oxford English Dictionary project at UW, which sought to create a searchable electronic version of the Oxford English Dictionary. The project was selected by the Oxford University Press as a partner for the computerisation leading to the publication of the second edition of the OED. The UW project's main contributions were in the parsing of the source text to enhance the tagging and on building a full text searching system based on PAT trees (a version of suffix array). This project later culminated in another successful commercial venture, the Open Text Corporation. Gonnet was founder and chairman of the Board of OTC until 1994.

Gonnet is a professor in Informatik at ETH Zurich in Zurich, Switzerland,[4] and chief scientist of two Canadian startups: CeeqIT and Porfiau.

On March 14, 2013 Gonnet was awarded a Dr. Honoris Causa by the Universidad de la República, engineering faculty from Uruguay.

References

External links

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