Andy Stanford-Clark
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Andrew James Stanford-Clark | |
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Occupation | IBM Distinguished Engineer and CTO of Smart Energy technologies. |
Andrew (Andy) James Stanford-Clark FBCS, CITP is a British information technology research engineer, specialising in telemetry and publish/subscribe messaging. He leads a research team at IBM, and is a Member of the IBM Academy of Technology, and IBM Master Inventor. He is also a visiting professor at Newcastle University, and a member of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Peer Review College. He regularly gives talks about his profession.
Education
Stanford-Clark attended Stockport Grammar School, Cheshire, and University of East Anglia, Norwich. He holds a BSc in Computing Studies and Mathematics from the University of East Anglia. Stanford-Clark also holds a Ph.D. in Parallel Computing: Parallel Paradigms and their Implementation from the University of East Anglia which he achieved in 1991. In 2006, Stanford-Clark became a Fellow of the British Computer Society and Chartered IT Professional.
IBM
Stanford-Clark joined IBM in 1991 in the “Communications Software” group. Stanford-Clark performed a number of roles within IBM, focusing primarily on parallel processing and pervasive messaging.
In 2002 Stanford-Clark became a member of IBM Academy of Technology and was recognised as an IBM Master Inventor. He became an IBM Distinguished Engineer in 2007.
In 2010 he became Chief Technology Officer of Smart Energy Technologies, as part of IBM's Smarter Planet strategy, based on his background in pervasive messaging.
Stanford-Clark has been granted 11 patents and, as of 2014[update] has 45 pending, as well as 30 additional invention disclosures published in IBM Technology Journal and IP.com. Stanford-Clark has also taken an active role in mentoring others and played a part in accelerating innovation, highlighted by his involvement in an IBM student scheme called Extreme Blue.[1] Stanford-Clark leads the “Pervasive and Advanced Messaging Technologies” research group. The group works to further IBM's Smarter Planet initiative and is located at Hursley House near Winchester, Hampshire.[2][3]
In 2015 he appeared in University Challenge on BBC2.
Telemetry
In 1999, Stanford-Clark collaborated with Arlen Nipper to author the first version of the MQ Telemetry Transport (MQTT) protocol.[4] MQTT is a specialised protocol enabling telemetry or lightweight sensor and mobile systems to provide information to computer programs via a publish/subscribe mechanism.
Stanford-Clark gained media attention for this in the late 2000s by connecting his home automation system via MQTT to Twitter, a popular microblogging site.[5][6]
References
- ↑ IBM Press Release on Extreme Blue project
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External links
- stanford-clark.com – Stanford-Clark's homepage
- Andy Stanford-Clark on TwitterLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Innovation Begins at Home at TEDx
- Video interview of Andy Stanford-Clark by Zadi Diaz of EPIC FU, weekly web show that covers online pop culture (October 7, 2008)
- The Patron Saint of Energy Geeks: A Guest Post - a post by Andy on the HomeCamp blog, on his home automation system, energy monitoring and Twitter
- WebSphere MQ Telemetry - a video featuring Andy Stanford-Clark talking about his work on Twittering ferries and the MQTT protocol
- Articles with hCards
- Articles containing potentially dated statements from 2014
- Living people
- People educated at Stockport Grammar School
- Alumni of the University of East Anglia
- IBM employees
- British engineers
- British computer scientists
- Fellows of the British Computer Society
- British software engineers
- Researchers in distributed computing