Raymie Stata
American computer scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raymond Paul "Raymie" Stata is an American computer engineer and business executive.
Raymie Stata | |
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![]() Stata in 2010 | |
Born | Raymond Paul Stata March 27, 1968 Brookline, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Alma mater | MIT |
Parents |
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Relatives | Nicole Stata (sister) |
Scientific career | |
Institutions |
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Thesis | Modularity in the Presence of Subclassing (1996) |
Doctoral advisor | John Guttag |
Early life
Stata received his bachelor's and master's degrees in Computer Science and Engineering from MIT, where he also earned his Ph.D. in 1996, under adviser John Guttag.[1]
Stata's father, Ray Stata, was founder and chairman of Analog Devices.[2]
Career
Summarize
Perspective
After finishing his Ph.D., Stata worked for Digital Equipment Corporation's Systems Research Center, where he contributed to the AltaVista search engine.[3] He was an assistant professor of Computer Science at the Baskin School of Engineering at UC Santa Cruz, and collaborated with the Internet Archive.[4][5]
In 2002, Stata founded Stata Laboratories. The company developed the Bloomba search-based e-mail client and the SAProxy anti-spam filter.[6][7]
Stata Labs was acquired by Yahoo! in 2004, for an undisclosed amount.[8][9][10] Stata continued working for Yahoo!, and in 2010, became the company's chief technology officer,[11] a position he held until he left the company in 2012.[12] With Yahoo!, Stata co-developed a composition model for cloud-hosted serving applications, for which he was granted a patent.[13] Stata was also involved early in Apache Hadoop, consulting with and eventually hiring its founders Doug Cutting and Mike Cafarella at Yahoo!.[14][15]
After leaving Yahoo! in 2012, Stata founded Altiscale,[3] a company that provided Apache Hadoop-as-a-service marketed as "big data in the cloud".[16] Altiscale was named a Cool Vendor in Big Data by Gartner for 2015.[17][18] Stata was Altiscale's CEO until 2016, when the company was acquired by the software company SAP for more than $125 million.[19][20] Following SAP's acquisition, Stata became senior vice president of big data services for about a year.[21]
Since 2018, Stata was product and technology advisor for Aqfer, an enterprise software company developing data marketing tools.[22] Stata is on the board for technology companies Vanu[23] and Gamalon.[24]
Stata is on the advisory council for QuakeFinder, a research and development group focusing on earthquake prediction.[25] Until 2018, he was on the board of trustees for the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.[26]
Publications
- Stata, Raymie; Abadi, Martin (1999-01-01). "A type system for Java bytecode subroutines". ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems. 21 (1): 90–137. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.35.5980. doi:10.1145/314602.314606. ISSN 0164-0925. S2CID 315658.
- Broder, A.; Kumar, R.; Maghoul, F.; Raghavan, P.; Rajagopalan, S.; Stata, R.; Tomkins, A.; Wiener, J. (2000). "Graph structure in the web". WWW Conference. Archived from the original on 2018-01-20. Retrieved 2018-04-03.
- Flanagan, Cormac; Leino, K. Rustan M.; Lillibridge, Mark; Nelson, Greg; Saxe, James B.; Stata, Raymie; Flanagan, Cormac; Leino, K. Rustan M.; Lillibridge, Mark (2002). Extended static checking for Java. Vol. 37. pp. 234–245. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.19.162. doi:10.1145/543552.512558. ISBN 978-1581134636.
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ignored (help) - Kraft, R.; Stata, R. (November 2003). "Finding buying guides with a Web carnivore". Proceedings of the IEEE/LEOS 3rd International Conference on Numerical Simulation of Semiconductor Optoelectronic Devices (IEEE Cat. No.03EX726). pp. 84–92. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.126.485. doi:10.1109/laweb.2003.1250286. ISBN 978-0-7695-2058-2. S2CID 16784456.
References
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