Nate Foster View
Nate Foster is a Professor of Computer Science at Cornell University and a Platform Architect at Intel. The goal of his research is to develop languages and tools that make it easy for programmers to build secure and reliable systems. His current work focuses on the design and implementation of languages for programming software-defined networks. In the past he has also worked on bidirectional languages (also known as “lenses”), database query languages, data provenance, type systems, mechanized proof, and formal semantics. He received a PhD in Computer Science from the University of Pennsylvania, an MPhil in History and Philosophy of Science from Cambridge University, and a BA in Computer Science from Williams College. His awards include a Sloan Research Fellowship, an NSF CAREER Award, the SIGCOMM Rising Star Award, a Most Influential POPL Paper Award, a most Influential ICFP Paper Award, a Tien ‘72 Teaching Award, several Google Research Awards, a Yahoo! Academic Career Enhancement Award, a Cornell Engineering Research Excellence Award, and the Morris and Dorothy Rubinoff Award.
Posts by Nate Foster
Making Networks Safe and Agile with Formal Methods and Programming Abstractions: Future Directions
For years, networks have been seen as hard to manage and hard to evolve. They are hard to manage because even small networks are complex, with multiple devices and protocols interacti...
In formal methods, programming languages, By Nate Foster, Arvind Krishnamurthy, Ratul Mahajan, Todd Millstein, David Walker, Anduo Wang, Pamela Zave, Nov 27, 2023