Christos Kozyrakis is an Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Stanford University. He leads the multi-scale architecture & systems team (MAST), a research group that investigates hardware architectures, runtime management environments, system software, and programming models for systems ranging from cellphones to warehouse-scale datacenters. His current research focuses on resource efficient cloud computing, energy efficient compute and memory systems for emerging workloads, and scalable operating systems. Christos joined Stanford in 2002 after receiving a PhD in Computer Science from UC Berkeley. His alma mater is the University of Crete in Greece. He is a fellow of the ACM and the IEEE. Christos' first name in full is "Christoforos".
Updates
- I am teaching C349D Cloud Computing in Fall'17.
- My view on the Role of Hardware in Datacenter Efficiency.
- The New York Times on how we use machine learning to improve cloud efficiency.
- The summary of the ISAT workshop on Advancing Computer Systems without Technology Progress.
- Our white paper on "21st Century Computer Architecture" (blog).
- Memory Management Beyond Free() from the 2011 ISMM conference.
- What cloud computing means for architects from the 2009 WIOSCA workshop.
- The slides for The Case for Hardware Support for Transactional Memory.
- A good introduction to transactional memory and the TM tutorial slides from the ACACES'08 summer school and the PACT'07 conference.
- How to Have Bad Career as a Grad Student (check out the original too).
- If you are a student interested in working with me, read this first.