Alexander Tetelbaum

Alexander Tetelbaum (born 1948 in Kiev, Ukraine) is an educator, inventor, scientist, academician, and entrepreneur. He has been a pioneer[1] in the Electronic Design Automation (EDA) industry since the 1960s. He has been selected and has held high level positions in academia and industry. He is a Fellow and Honorary Doctor of several universities, academies, and societies. He holds more than 40 US patents [2] and is the author and co-author of 250 publications, including 8 books. He holds Doctor of Engineering Science (PhD+) degree in Computer Science and Engineering as well as PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering. Tetelbaum was Professor of Design Automation and a Distinguished Scientist at the National Technical University of Ukraine. In 1991, he founded and presided over the International Solomon University. He has served as a reviewer for the American Mathematical Society since 1994. Dr. Tetelbaum led design methodology and automation teams in LSI Corporation, Silicon Graphics (SGI), and Zycad Corporations. Currently, he is President and CEO of Abelite Design Automation, Inc.[3]

Alexander Tetelbaum was selected for inclusion in Who's Who in the World, Men of Achievement, Who's Who in Technology, Who's Who in American Education, 5000 Personalities of the World, Who's Who in Science and Engineering, The International Directory of Distinguished Leadership, Longman Reference on Research Directories. WorldAtlas.com has included Dr. Tetelbaum as a Ukrainian famous native as an inventor and scientist who “has made a significant contribution to the country in his personal endeavors”.[4] The Star (ID: HD92636) residing at the astronomically verified position of constellation Leo (Right Ascension: 10h41m55.30s, Declination: +08.24.52.0) is hereby named as “Dr. Alexander Tetelbaum”. His hobbies include oil painting, beach volleyball, chess, solving and developing puzzles in non-standard thinking and critical problem solving. Aliases: Alexander Y. Tetelbaum, Aleksander Tetelbaum, Russian: Алеκсандр Яковлевич Тетельбаум, Ukrainian: Олеκсандр Якович Тетельбаум.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.