Ricardo Telichevesky
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Ricardo Telichevesky
Summary
Ricardo Telichevesky is a human[1]. He worked as an electrical engineer[2].
Key Facts
- Ricardo Telichevesky worked as an electrical engineer[2].
- Ricardo Telichevesky was employed by Cadence Design Systems[3].
- Ricardo Telichevesky was educated at Massachusetts Institute of Technology[4].
- Ricardo Telichevesky was educated at Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul[5].
- Ricardo Telichevesky was educated at Technion – Israel Institute of Technology[6].
- Ricardo Telichevesky's doctoral advisor was Jacob K. White[7].
- Ricardo Telichevesky's doctoral advisor was Bill Dally[8].
- Ricardo Telichevesky is recorded as male[9].
- Ricardo Telichevesky's instance of is recorded as human[10].
- Ricardo Telichevesky's Mathematics Genealogy Project ID is recorded as 193026[11].
- Ricardo Telichevesky's given name is recorded as Ricardo[12].
- Ricardo Telichevesky's DBLP author ID is recorded as 43/4865[13].
- Ricardo Telichevesky's IEEE Xplore author ID is recorded as 37298723000[14].
Body
Education
Educated at Massachusetts Institute of Technology[4], a university[15], in United States[16], founded in 1861[17], headquartered in Cambridge[18]; Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul[5], a university[19], in Brazil[20], founded in 1895[21]; and Technion – Israel Institute of Technology[6], a university[22], in Israel[23], founded in 1924[24], headquartered in Haifa[25]. Doctoral advisors include Jacob K. White[7], an engineer[26], awarded the IEEE Fellow[27] and Bill Dally[8], a computer scientist[28], b. 1960[29], of United States[30], awarded the Eckert–Mauchly Award[31], specialised in computer science[32].
Career and Affiliations
Ricardo Telichevesky's professions included electrical engineer[2]. Among his employers was Cadence Design Systems[3].
FAQs
What did Ricardo Telichevesky do for work?
Ricardo Telichevesky worked as electrical engineer[2].
Where did Ricardo Telichevesky go to school?
Ricardo Telichevesky was educated at Massachusetts Institute of Technology[4], Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul[5], and Technion – Israel Institute of Technology[6].