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  1. American computer scientist. This page was last edited on 24 June 2024, at 14:13. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  2. Abstract:In the 1980s, Mead and Conway democratized chip design and high-level language programming surpassed assembly language programming, which made instr...

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    • UBC Computer Science
  3. David Andrew Patterson (born November 16, 1947) is an American computer pioneer and academic who has held the position of professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley since 1976.

  4. Oct 10, 2018 · David Patterson is the Pardee Professor Emeritus of Computer Science at the University of California at Berkeley, which he joined after graduating from UCLA in 1976. His research style is to identify critical questions for the IT industry and gather inter-disciplinary groups of faculty and graduate students to answer them.

  5. David Patterson is the Pardee Professor of Computer Science, Emeritus at the University of California at Berkeley, which he joined after graduating from UCLA in 1977.His teaching has been honored by the Distinguished Teaching Award from the University of California, the Karlstrom Award from ACM, and the Mulligan Education Medal and Undergraduate Teaching Award from IEEE. Prof. Patterson received the IEEE Technical Achievement Award and the ACM Eckert-Mauchly Award for contributions to RISC ...

  6. Computer Organization and Design: the Hardware/Software Interface, Second Edition (An inexpensive place to buy it ) ISBN 1-55860-428-6; Fall 2001 CS 294-4 Home Page: Recovery Oriented Computing; Fall 2001 CS 61C Home Page: Machine Structures; Spring 2001 CS 252 Home Page; Additional Resources for the book used in CS 252,

  7. David Patterson, professor emeritus of electrical engineering and computer sciences, was named co-winner of the prestigious A.M. Turing Award — often called the Nobel Prize of computing — along with John Hennessy, former president of Stanford University. They were honored for their pioneering work on reduced instruction set computer microprocessors, which has proved foundational to computer architecture as well as to mobile and Internet of Things technologies.