2008/10-07

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(New page: {{Cluedump |title=Athena Under the Hood |date=2008-10-07 20:30 |presenters=Marc Horowitz (marc) |location=56-114 |abstract= Athena is a ubiquitous part of the computing infrastructure at M...)
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|date=2008-10-07 20:30
|date=2008-10-07 20:30
|presenters=Marc Horowitz (marc)
|presenters=Marc Horowitz (marc)
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|location=56-114
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|location=4-231
|abstract=
|abstract=
Athena is a ubiquitous part of the computing infrastructure at MIT, often taken for granted.  Its history goes back more than twenty years, encompassing the invention of a number of technologies which are widespread today.  However, its development marked a time of rapid change in distributed computing.  In some ways, Athena is still well ahead of a typical distributed computing environment.
Athena is a ubiquitous part of the computing infrastructure at MIT, often taken for granted.  Its history goes back more than twenty years, encompassing the invention of a number of technologies which are widespread today.  However, its development marked a time of rapid change in distributed computing.  In some ways, Athena is still well ahead of a typical distributed computing environment.
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I will discuss the history of Athena, its notable inventions, and give an overview of each of the network and workstation services which make up Athena today, including Kerberos, AFS, Moira, Hesiod, and the installation and update processes.
I will discuss the history of Athena, its notable inventions, and give an overview of each of the network and workstation services which make up Athena today, including Kerberos, AFS, Moira, Hesiod, and the installation and update processes.
|bio=
|bio=
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Marc Horowitz arrived at MIT in 1988, when Athena was still a funded research project.  As a Watchmaker (student developer) at Project Athena, he worked on the Kerberos, Zephyr, and Moira projects.  Marc was also vice-chairman of the Student Information Processing Board in 1991, and Secretary in 1992.  From 1992 to 2000, Marc continued to maintain an informal relationship with Athena, working on commercial versions of technologies born there, especially Kerberos, and participating in follow-on open source development and IETF standards activities.  Today, he is on leave from BEA Systems in Burlington, having worked on RFID and event server products there.
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Marc Horowitz arrived at MIT in 1988, when Athena was still a funded research project.  As a Watchmaker (student developer) at Project Athena, he worked on the Kerberos, Zephyr, and Moira projects.  Marc was also vice-chairman of the Student Information Processing Board in 1991, and Secretary in 1992.  From 1992 to 2000, Marc continued to maintain an informal relationship with Athena, working on commercial versions of technologies born there, especially Kerberos, and participating in follow-on open source development and IETF standards activities.  Today, he is Vice President of Engineering at Square Products Corporation, a startup focusing on software for social music listening.
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|notes=[http://web.mit.edu/cluedumps/slides/how-athena-works-2008.pdf How Athena Works (slides)]
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Latest revision as of 00:21, 3 November 2008

[edit] Athena Under the Hood

Date: October 7, 2008, at 4:30 PM
Presenters: Marc Horowitz (marc)
Location: 4-231
Notes: How Athena Works (slides)
Abstract: Athena is a ubiquitous part of the computing infrastructure at MIT, often taken for granted. Its history goes back more than twenty years, encompassing the invention of a number of technologies which are widespread today. However, its development marked a time of rapid change in distributed computing. In some ways, Athena is still well ahead of a typical distributed computing environment.

I will discuss the history of Athena, its notable inventions, and give an overview of each of the network and workstation services which make up Athena today, including Kerberos, AFS, Moira, Hesiod, and the installation and update processes.

Bio: Marc Horowitz arrived at MIT in 1988, when Athena was still a funded research project. As a Watchmaker (student developer) at Project Athena, he worked on the Kerberos, Zephyr, and Moira projects. Marc was also vice-chairman of the Student Information Processing Board in 1991, and Secretary in 1992. From 1992 to 2000, Marc continued to maintain an informal relationship with Athena, working on commercial versions of technologies born there, especially Kerberos, and participating in follow-on open source development and IETF standards activities. Today, he is Vice President of Engineering at Square Products Corporation, a startup focusing on software for social music listening.
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