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#Georgia tech falconview software
He has played a leadership role in the NSF GENI project, leading both the Georgia Tech campus trials as well as the regional deployment and the Software Defined Exchange (SDX). He is the co-director of the Georgia Tech Research Network Operations Center (GT-RNOC), which supports research efforts across campus, and principal leader of the Convergence Innovation Competition, which pairs students and industry sponsors on novel projects. He emphasizes innovation, entrepreneurship and industry involvement in student projects and application development. Russ Clark is a senior research scientist in Georgia Tech's School of Computer Science, who engages hundreds of students each semester in mobile development, networking and the Internet of Things research. in Computer Science from the University of Toronto in 2006. He served on standards committees (WiMAX), and was and is a principal investigator on projects for the Office of Naval Research and Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA). He received his Ph.D. Kolesnikov has been involved in the design and analysis of smart grid networks, storage area networks, wireless and biometric authentication, and other secure systems. His other interests include key exchange, especially its definitional aspects. He has authored a number of papers and patent applications about improving and using garbled circuits, homomorphic encryption, and related techniques. His current research interest is practical and foundational aspects of secure computation, especially of two-party computation. Kolesnikov has worked on cryptography and security since 2000. Prior to joining Georgia Tech, Vlad Kolesnikov was a member of the technical staff in Bell Labs' Enabling Computing Technologies domain in Murray Hill, NJ.