- Chris Wallace (computer scientist)
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Professor Christopher Stewart Wallace (26 October 1933—7 August 2004) was an Australian computer scientist (and physicist, who also contributed to a variety of other areas) notable for having devised:
- The minimum message length principle (Wallace and Boulton, 1968, WB1968) — an information-theoretic principle in statistics, econometrics, machine learning, inductive inference and knowledge discovery which can be seen both as a mathematical formalisation of Occam's Razor and as an invariant Bayesian method of model selection and point estimation,
- The Wallace tree multiplier (1964) (see multiplication ALU),
- a variety of random number generators,
- a theory in physics and philosophy that entropy is not the arrow of time,
- a refrigeration system (from the 1950s, whose design is still in use in 2010),
- hardware for detecting and counting cosmic rays,
- design of computer operating systems,
- and a vast range of other works - see, e.g., "Christopher Stewart WALLACE (1933-2004) memorial special issue". Computer Journal 51 (5): 523–607. 5 September 2008. doi:10.1093/comjnl/bxm117. http://comjnl.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol51/issue5. and its ``Foreword re C. S. Wallace , pp523-560.
He was appointed Foundation Chair of Information Science at Monash University in 1968 at the age of 34 (before the Department was later re-named Computer Science), and Professor Emeritus in 1996. Wallace was a fellow of the Australian Computer Society and in 1995 he was appointed a fellow of the ACM "For research in a number of areas in Computer Science including fast multiplication algorithm, minimum message length principle and its applications, random number generation, computer architecture, numerical solution of ODE's, and contribution to Australian Computer Science."[1]
Wallace received his PhD (in Physics) from the University of Sydney in 1959. He was married to Judy Ogilvie, the first operator of SILLIAC, one of Australia's first computers which was launched on the 12 of September 1956 at the University of Sydney [2]. He also engineered one of the world's first Local Area Networks in the mid 1960s [3].
External links
- Tribute to IT pioneer Chris Wallace — 13 October 2004
- Remembering Emeritus Professor Chris Wallace — 5 September 2008
- Remembering Emeritus Professor Chris Wallace (Information Technology), 2008
- Christopher S. Wallace publications, and searchable publications database
- Wallace, C.S. (posthumous, 2005), Statistical and Inductive Inference by Minimum Message Length, Springer (Series: Information Science and Statistics), 2005, XVI, 432 pp., 22 illus., Hardcover, ISBN 0-387-23795-X. (Links to chapter headings, table of contents and sample pages.)
- "Christopher Stewart WALLACE (1933-2004) memorial special issue". Computer Journal 51 (5): 523–607. 5 September 2008. doi:10.1093/comjnl/bxm117. http://comjnl.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol51/issue5.
- Dowe, D.L. (5 September 2008). "Foreword re C. S. Wallace". Computer Journal 51 (5): 523–560. doi:10.1093/comjnl/bxm117. http://comjnl.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/51/5/523. (and here). (As far as we know, this cites and includes references to every paper which Chris Wallace ever wrote [and every thesis he ever supervised].)
- Chris Wallace Award for Outstanding Research Contribution — established by CORE (The Computing Research and Education Association of Australasia)
Categories:- 1933 births
- 2004 deaths
- Australian computer scientists
- Australian physicists
- Fellows of the Association for Computing Machinery
- Information theorists
- Monash University faculty
- Computer science teachers
- University of Sydney alumni
- Australian statisticians
- Computer scientists from Melbourne
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