# Kenneth Edward Rimey

> Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley 1989

**Wikidata**: [Q102315393](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q102315393)  
**Source**: https://4ort.xyz/entity/kenneth-edward-rimey

## Summary
Kenneth Edward Rimey is a computer scientist who earned his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1989. His doctoral advisor was Paul Norman Hilfinger, a university teacher and computer scientist with a Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University in 1981. He is documented in the Mathematics Genealogy Project with ID 115743.

## Biography
- Education: Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, 1989
- Known for: Doctoral work under Paul Norman Hilfinger
- Field(s): Computer science

## Contributions
The source material identifies Kenneth Edward Rimey through his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1989, advised by Paul Norman Hilfinger. No specific papers, products, companies, patents, open-source projects, or standards are detailed in the provided data.

## FAQs
**What is Kenneth Edward Rimey's educational background?**  
He obtained his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1989. This degree is referenced in Wikidata with ID .

**Who advised Kenneth Edward Rimey on his doctorate?**  
Paul Norman Hilfinger served as his doctoral advisor. Hilfinger holds a Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University in 1981 and works as a university teacher and computer scientist.

**What is Kenneth Edward Rimey's occupation and academic identifier?**  
Rimey is a computer scientist. He appears in the Mathematics Genealogy Project with ID 115743.

**How is Paul Norman Hilfinger connected to Kenneth Edward Rimey?**  
Hilfinger is listed twice in key people relations as Rimey's doctoral advisor, with his own Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University in 1981 and roles as university teacher and computer scientist.

## Why They Matter
Kenneth Edward Rimey's significance stems from his position in the academic lineage of computer science, as tracked by the Mathematics Genealogy Project under ID 115743. His Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1989, guided by Paul Norman Hilfinger, links him to a chain of scholars including Hilfinger's Carnegie Mellon training in 1981. Without this documented path, the genealogy of computer science expertise would miss this node, potentially obscuring influences in the field's university teaching and research sectors.

## Notable For
- Earning Ph.D. from University of California, Berkeley in 1989, referenced in Wikidata 
- Doctoral advisement by Paul Norman Hilfinger, Ph.D. Carnegie Mellon University 1981
- Inclusion in Mathematics Genealogy Project with ID 115743
- Classification as computer scientist in industry and service sectors with sitelink_count of 38 for the occupation

## Body
### Education and Academic Record
Kenneth Edward Rimey's given name is Kenneth. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of California, Berkeley in 1989. This is his wikidata_description: Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley 1989. The education fact is sourced from Wikidata with reference : .

### Doctoral Advisorship
Paul Norman Hilfinger advised Rimey's doctoral work. This relationship is confirmed via Wikidata reference : . Hilfinger appears in key people sections twice: first as Paul Norman Hilfinger, Ph.D. Carnegie Mellon University 1981, occupation university teacher and computer scientist; second identically.

### Professional Classification
Rimey is a computer scientist. This falls under the class of one who studies or practices computer science. The occupation ties to industry and service sectors. Computer scientist has a sitelink_count of 38.

### Genealogy and Identifiers
Rimey holds Mathematics Genealogy Project ID 115743. He is instance_of human. These properties derive from Wikidata and academic sources.

### Related Connections
All provided knowledge links back to Rimey's Ph.D., his advisor Paul Norman Hilfinger, and structured properties like educated_at University of California, Berkeley and doctoral_advisor Paul Norman Hilfinger. No additional employers, publications, or contributions appear in the raw description or detailed knowledge.

## References

1. Mathematics Genealogy Project