Paul Borman

A graduate from St. Olaf College, Paul joined the Cray 2 group at Cray Research. Paul was one of the first people to boot a UNIX operating system on the Cray 2 supercomputer. He ported the C library, 30% to 40% of the System V commands, NFS and a variety of other utilities to the Cray 2. Paul brought the X10 Window System to Cray Research, using it in his multiprocessor debugger (YADB) as well as a generic system resource usage monitoring tool (CrayPerf). He took a 17 month experiment in cross-culture by working at Nihon Cray in Tokyo where he assisted in bringing the company into the UNIX world and setting up their local area network. Upon return to the United States he worked on a variety of projects, which included working on Kerberos V as a visiting engineer at MIT, distributed computing, voice recognition, and Cvo, a C++ based toolkit for the X11 Window System. During this time he also continued his role as the hired UNIX gun for his group.

After spending 10 years at Cray Research Paul made the jump in October 1994 to Berkeley Software Design, Inc. where he continues to work on a wide variety of projects.

Krystal Technologies
Email: paul@kryslix.com


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