George Necula
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George Necula
Summary
George Necula is a human[1]. He worked as a computer scientist[2] and engineer[3]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14 views/month, #7,290 of 1,000,298).[4]
Key Facts
- George Necula held citizenship in Romania[5].
- George Necula worked as a computer scientist[2].
- George Necula's professions included engineer[3].
- Among George Necula's employers was University of California, Berkeley[6].
- George Necula's education included a stint at Carnegie Mellon University[7].
- George Necula was educated at Politehnica University of Bucharest[8].
- George Necula's doctoral advisor was Peter Lee[9].
- George Necula received the Grace Murray Hopper Award[10].
- George Necula's image is recorded as George Necula.jpg[11].
- George Necula is recorded as male[12].
- George Necula's instance of is recorded as human[13].
- George Necula supervised Adam James Chlipala as a doctoral student[14].
- George Necula supervised Robert Richard Schneck as a doctoral student[15].
- George Necula supervised Sumit Gulwani as a doctoral student[16].
- George Necula supervised Scott McPeak as a doctoral student[17].
- George Necula supervised Westley R. Weimer as a doctoral student[18].
- George Necula supervised Jeremy Paul Condit as a doctoral student[19].
- George Necula supervised Matthew Thomas Harren as a doctoral student[20].
- George Necula supervised Bor-Yuh Evan Chang as a doctoral student[21].
- George Necula's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 180173970035923392865[22].
- George Necula's IdRef ID is recorded as 282718168[23].
- George Necula's Commons category is recorded as George Necula[24].
- George Necula's Mathematics Genealogy Project ID is recorded as 50191[25].
- George Necula's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0b6gtws[26].
- George Necula's family name is recorded as Necula[27].
Body
Education
Educated at Carnegie Mellon University[7], a private university[28], in United States[29], founded in 1900[30], headquartered in Pittsburgh[31] and Politehnica University of Bucharest[8], a university[32], in Romania[33], founded in 1864[34], headquartered in Bucharest[35]. George Necula's doctoral advisor was Peter Lee[9]. He studied under Peter Lee[36].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include computer scientist[2] and engineer[3]. George Necula was employed by University of California, Berkeley[6]. Doctoral students include Adam James Chlipala[14], a computer scientist[37]; Robert Richard Schneck[15], a computer scientist[38]; Sumit Gulwani[16], a computer scientist[39], awarded the ACM Fellow[40]; Scott McPeak[17], a computer scientist[41]; Westley R. Weimer[18], a computer scientist[42]; and Jeremy Paul Condit[19], a computer scientist[43].
Recognition
George Necula received the Grace Murray Hopper Award[10].
Why It Matters
George Necula ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14 views/month, #7,290 of 1,000,298).[4] He is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[44]
His notable doctoral advisees include Robert Richard Schneck[45], a computer scientist[46]; Sumit Gulwani[47], a computer scientist[48], awarded the ACM Fellow[49]; Scott McPeak[50], a computer scientist[51]; Westley R. Weimer[52], a computer scientist[53]; Adam James Chlipala[54], a computer scientist[55]; and Matthew Thomas Harren[56], a computer scientist[57].
FAQs
What did George Necula do for work?
George Necula worked as computer scientist[2] and engineer[3].
Where did George Necula go to school?
George Necula was educated at Carnegie Mellon University[7] and Politehnica University of Bucharest[8].
What awards did George Necula receive?
Honors received include Grace Murray Hopper Award[10].