David M. Tutelman |
16 Tilton Drive
Wayside, New Jersey 07712
Tel. 732-922-9576 |
EXPERIENCE
Fall 2002: The College of New Jersey
(Trenton, NJ)
As an Adjunct Professor, taught MIS majors
in the business school.
Aug 1997 - Jan 2002: Lucent Technologies (Holmdel, NJ)
As a Distinguished Member of Technical Staff,
was a software engineer for several internet products, including:
- The Lucent Security Management Server,
which remotely configured Internet security "appliances" like firewalls and
Virtual Private Networks. I developed the logging and database (JDBC &
SQL) subsystems, with a strongly object-oriented design and an efficient
implementation in Java for portability between UNIX and Windows NT.
- MultiVoice Access Manager, Lucent's Internet
Telephony gatekeeper. I developed features (mostly call routing and a web-based
user interface) using C++ for UNIX and Windows NT.
Mar 1986 - Aug 1997: AT&T and Bell
Laboratories (Lincroft, NJ)
As a Distinguished Member of Technical Staff
and a Technology Consultant, led several architecture, prototyping,
and product development projects involving Personal Computers, Local-Area
Networks, and Electronic Mail and Messaging. Among my projects as lead developer:
- A portable (Windows, UNIX, MSDOS, Macintosh)
object-oriented library in C++ for sending and receiving E-mail messages.
- A Windows 95 mail transport "driver"
using Microsoft’s Messaging API (MAPI).
- An early (pre-i386) multi-tasking version
of MS-DOS for AT&T Personal Computers, mostly using assembly language.
Dec 1968 - Mar 1986: Bell Laboratories
(Holmdel, NJ)
Supervised a group of technical staff
(professionals with MS or PhD degrees). Group size ranged from two to fourteen,
depending on the job. Among my group's assignments were:
- Architecture of Dataphone Digital Service
and Switched DDS (early 1970s).
- Software and hardware development of
data communications features on No. 1 ESS (the first computer-controlled
telephone switch, in the mid-1970s).
- Development of data services application
software for the System 75 PBX (mid-1980s).
- Architecture and planning for the post-divestiture
AT&T product family (early 1980s).
- I represented AT&T in standards bodies,
including CCITT, ISO, and ANSI, for such data communications standards in
the 1970s.
- Invention of a distributed logic processor
(forerunner to the bit-sliced microprocessor, in the late 1960s; I hold several
patents).
- Contract negotiation for acquisition
of commercial software intended for sale with AT&T computer systems (early
1980s).
- Software and hardware development of
host and terminal front ends for Net 1000 (late 1970s).
I also led or served on inter-department task
forces, was consultant to other organizations (including marketing and legal),
and taught company technical courses (I designed and taught Bell Labs’ first
in-house course in Computer Networking in the 1970s).
Jun 1962 - Dec 1968: Bell Laboratories
(Holmdel, NJ)
Member of Technical Staff, doing research
and development for data communications equipment, including modems, multiplexers,
data switches, and transmission test instruments.
Summer 1961: IBM (Poughkeepsie, NY)
Junior engineer. Designed automatic testers
for production line checkout of computer equipment (including the 7094 computer
and the 026 keypunch).
EDUCATION