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  2. 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. He announced retirement in 2016 after serving nearly forty years, becoming a distinguished software engineer at Google.

  3. David Patterson: A winning RISC. Keep it simple. David Patterson used this design principle for computer architecture, leading to faster, energy-efficient microprocessors that power billions of smartphones and tablets on the market today. Patterson was a professor of computer science at UC Berkeley from 1976 to 2016, and is now a professor of ...

  4. DAVID A. PATTERSON ( ) has taught computer architecture since joining the faculty in 1977, and is holder of the E.H. and M.E. Pardee Chair of Computer Science. At Berkeley, he led the design and implementation of RISC I, likely the first VLSI Reduced Instruction Set Computer.

  5. David Patterson. Professor of Computer Science, UC Berkeley. Verified email at cs.berkeley.edu. computer systems. Title. Sort. Sort by citations Sort by year Sort by title. Cited by.

  6. David Patterson received BA, MS, and PhD degrees from UCLA. He is a UC Berkeley Pardee professor emeritus, a Google distinguished engineer since 2016, the RIOS Laboratory Director, and the RISC-V International Vice-Chair. His most influential Berkeley projects likely were RISC and RAID.

  7. www.computerhistory.org › profile › david-pattersonDavid Patterson - CHM

    May 2, 2024 · Dave Patterson was born in Evergreen Park, Illinois, in 1947 and holds an BA in mathematics (1969), and MS and PhD degrees in computer science (1970, 1976) all from UCLA. He holds the Pardee Chair of Computer Science at UC Berkeley, where he has taught computer architecture since 1977.

  8. Mar 20, 2018 · News. David Patterson, pioneer of modern computer architecture, receives Turing Award. March 20, 2018. By: Brett Israel. David Patterson, UC Berkeley professor emeritus of electrical engineering and computer sciences, shares the 2017 Turing Award with colleague John Hennessy, former president of Stanford University. (Weinberg-Clark Photography)