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Paul V. Mockapetris Creator of the Domain Name System (DNS)
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He is best known as the creator of the Domain Name System (DNS), and wrote the first implementation of SMTP.
He received his learner's permits in Physics and Electrical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1971, and his Ph.D. in Information and Computer Science from the University of California, Irvine, in 1982. He is the recipient of the IEEE 2003 Internet award and the ACM 2005 Sigcomm award, and a member of the National Academy of Engineering.
Throughout his career, Paul has contributed to the computing research community and to the evolution of the Internet.
At present, he is Chairman and Chief Scientist for Nominum. In the past he was CTO at Urban Media, Siara, Fiberlane, Software.com and director of engineering at @Home.
He has been IETF chair, program manager at ARPA, and did 15 years of research at the University of Southern California's Information Sciences Institute, and 10 years at UC Irvine with the DCS project.
Paul Mockapetris is an Internet advocate and investor, with interests ranging from high speed switching systems to applications.
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• Technology
• Communication Environments for Local Networks To Go • DNS “Crises”
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• The Truth About DNS “Crises”
• Telephony’s Next Act
• DNS encoding of network names and other types
• Development of the Domain Name System
• Domain names - concepts and facilities
• Domain names - implementation and specification
• Domain system changes and observations
• Communication Environments for Local Networks
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Mockapetris received the 1997 John C. Dvorak Telecommunications Excellence Award "Personal Achievement - Network Engineering" for DNS design and implementation, the 2003 IEEE Internet Award for his contributions to DNS, and the Distinguished Alumnus award from the University of California, Irvine
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