Everything about David P Reed totally explained
David P. Reed (born
January 31,
1952) is an
American computer scientist, educated at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, known for a number of significant contributions to
computer networking.
He was heavily involved in the
early development of
TCP/IP, and was the designer of the
User Datagram Protocol (UDP). He was also one of the authors of the original paper about the
end-to-end principle,
End-to-end arguments in system design, published in
1984.
He is also known for
Reed's law, his
assertion that the utility of large s, particularly
social networks, can scale
exponentially with the size of the network. (It was first cited in "The Law of the Pack," Harvard Business Review (February 2001) pp 23-4.)
Dr. Reed is an
Adjunct Professor at the
MIT Media Lab in the
Viral Communications
group and is one of six principal architects of the
Croquet project (along with
Alan Kay,
Julian Lombardi,
Andreas Raab,
David A. Smith, and
Mark McCahill). He is also on the advisory board of
TTI/Vanguard.
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