Originally posted on UC Berkeley EECS News
Natacha Crooks wins 2020 ACM SIGOPS Dennis M. Ritchie dissertation award
CS Assistant Prof. Natacha Crooks has won the 2020 ACM Special Interest Group on Operating Systems (SIGOPS) Dennis M. Ritchie dissertation award for her thesis titled “A Client-Centric Approach to Transactional Datastores.” The award, which recognizes creative research in software systems, was bestowed upon a dissertation which a colleague described as “a landmark, with deep and beautiful results in transactions and distributed consistency, and systems that exploit them.” The award committee commented that “Natacha Crooks’ thesis achieves something rare: a new conceptual framework for client-centric consistency and two efficient systems built on those insights. The document for this attractive package is accessible (in part) to undergraduates and the advanced material is very clearly written. With the enduring popularity of consistency as a research topic in distributed systems for the past several decades it is surprising that a breakthrough as large as Natacha’s took as long as it did.” The work was done at the University of Texas, Austin, advised by Lorenzo Alvisi and Simon Peter.