Donald Eastlake

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Donald E. Eastlake III, an American mathematician, computer scientist, and pioneer in network protocols and security. As undergraduate at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and fellow of Richard Greenblatt, Eastlake was co-developer of ITS (Incompatible Timesharing System), the PDP-6 operating system on which MacLisp was developed, and The Greenblatt Chess Program or Mac Hack VI in 1966.

=Protocols= Donald Eastlake has been involved with network protocols and security for many years with Motorola, IBM , Cybercash, and Digital Equipment Corporation. He is the chairman of IEEE 802.11 Task Group's, whose goal is to produce an amendment to the 802.11 (Wi-Fi) standard supporting mesh networking, and was heavily involved in developing the 802.11i (Robust Security) standard. He also co-chairs the IETF TRILL working group which is applying routing technology to layer 2 addresses. Donald has authored over 42 IETF RFCs, including the only IETF RFC with the word “sex” in its title, and two books.

=Selected Publications=

1967 ...

 * Richard Greenblatt, Donald Eastlake, Stephen D. Crocker (1967). The Greenblatt Chess Program. Proceedings of the AfiPs Fall Joint Computer Conference, Vol. 31, reprinted (1988) in Computer Chess Compendium, pdf from The Computer History Museum or as pdf or ps from DSpace at MIT
 * Donald Eastlake, Richard Greenblatt, Jack Holloway, Tom Knight, Stuart Nelson (1969). ITS 1.5 Reference Manual.
 * Donald Eastlake (1977). Tertiary Memory Access and Performance in the Datacomputer. VLDB 1977
 * Donald Eastlake, Stephen D. Crocker, Jeffrey I. Schiller (1994). Randomness Recommendations for Security. RFC 1750

2000 ...

 * David Burdette, Donald Eastlake, Marcus Gonçalves (2000). Internet Open Trading Protocol. McGraw-Hill, amazon
 * Donald Eastlake (2002). RFC 3354 - Internet Open Trading Protocol Version 2 Requirements.
 * Donald Eastlake, Kitty Niles (2002). Secure XML: The New Syntax for Signatures and Encryption. Pearson Education
 * Donald Eastlake, Stephen D. Crocker, Jeffrey I. Schiller (2005). Randomness Requirements for Security. RFC 4086

=External Links=
 * Donald Eastlake | LinkedIn
 * Hazel's Picture Gallery Donald Eastlake III by Chaz Boston Baden
 * ISO 7812 from Wikipedia

=References=

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