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Anujan Varma is a Professor and Graduate Director in the Computer
Engineering Department at UCSC. He holds a Masters in Computer Science
from the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore and a Ph.D. in
Computer Engineering from University of Southern California.
He was previously employed at the IBM
Thomas J. Watson Research Center from 1986 to 1991.
Professor Varma has worked
on the architecture design and implementation of a variety of switches,
including IP routers, ATM switches, Ethernet switches and SAN switches.
His current research interests include high-speed
switching and routing, optical networks, traffic scheduling and
congestion control. He has published more than 100 papers in
these areas and holds ten U.S. patents with more than 20 applications
pending.
Prof. Varma has received
several awards including the NSF Young Investigator Award, the IEEE
Darlington Award for the best paper published in IEEE Transactions on
Circuits and Systems during 1990-'91, and a Teaching Innovation Award
from the University of California. He has served on the program
committees of several conferences including ACM SIGCOMM and IEEE
INFOCOM.
Prof. Varma's research has received research funding from
DARPA, NSF, Department of Energy and several companies.
His research has had a significant impact on the networking
industry. His work on the SWANET (Self-routed Wavelength-Addressable
NETwork) project (a collaborative project with Stanford University and
University of California, Berkeley) led to the successful demonstration
of a wavelength-routed optical switch. The resulting patent has been
licensed by leading companies. His research in traffic scheduling
and ATM congestion control have also led to influential products.
He co-invented Starting Potential-based Fair Queueing (SPFQ),
a key scheduling algorithm used by Lucent Technologies (now Agere Systems)
in their popular ATLANTA switch fabric chipset.
He is also the co-inventor of a
rate allocation algorithm for supporting Available Bit-Rate (ABR) service
in ATM switches, that has been licensed by ATM switch vendors.
Dr. Varma has consulted extensively for the networking industry,
including Lucent technologies, Cisco Systems, Intel, Broadcom and
Bay Networks.
During 2000-2002, Dr. Varma founded TeraOptic Networks, a fabless
semiconductor company, with funding from Sequoia Capital and Redpoint
Ventures. There he led the architecture design and implementation
of a terabit-scale switch fabric chipset for high-end routers and switches.
In 2002 the company successfully demonstrated a 640 Gb/s system based on its
first-generation switch fabric chipset. The company's intellectual property
was later acquired by Intel Corporation. The company also received a
"Fabless Start-up of the Year" Award from the Fabless Semiconductor Association
in 2001.
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