BiographyMichael Shamos is Distinguished Career Professor in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University and Director of the M.S. in Artificial Intelligence and Innovation in the Language Technologies Institute. He will be directing the M.S. in Biotechnology, Innovation and Computation (MSBIC) program in 2018-2019 and the M.S. in Artificial Intelligence and Innovation (MSAII) program from 2018 onward. He was Director of the MSIT eBusiness Technology Program from its inception in 2004 until its termination in 2018 and is a Director of the Universal Library. He obtained an A.B. in Physics from Princeton under John Wheeler in 1968, then worked as a programmer in IBM's Components Division, simultaneously earning an M.A. in Physics from Vassar College in 1970. From 1970-1972 he served as a commissioned officer in the U.S Public Health Service as a Supervisory Programmer at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, earning an M.S. degree in Technology of Management from American University. Dr. Shamos enrolled in Yale University's Department of Computer Science as a member of its second entering class in 1972, earning an M.S. in 1973 and an M. Phil. in 1974. For his thesis work he developed fundamental algorithms in Computational Geometry with Dan Hoey. He was the author with Franco Preparata of "Computational Geometry: An Introduction," the first book in the field. In 1975, Dr. Shamos was hired as an Assistant Professor in the Computer Science and Mathematics departments at Carnegie Mellon. He was named "czar" of CMU's introductory programming courses and taught a graduate course in analysis of algorithms. In 1978 he received the Ph.D. from Yale and also joined the CMU Department of Statistics. In 1979, he formed Unilogic, Ltd. to commercialize Scribe, a document production system written by Brian Reid, who was then a graduate student at CMU. In 1981, after earning a law degree at Duquesne University, he requested adjunct faculty status at CMU to work full-time for Unilogic. In 1984, Unilogic spun out Lexeme Corporation, formed to develop automated tools for source language translation. The assets of Unilogic were sold in 1987 and Dr. Shamos spent the next three years largely studying billiard history, ultimately publishing several books on the subject. Since 1988 he has been a Contributing Editor of Billiards Digest magazine. More details can be found here. In 1990, Dr. Shamos joined the Webb Law Firm, the largest intellectual property firm in Pittsburgh. He spent eight years involved in all phases of intellectual property, prosecuting patent applications and litigating trademark and copyright cases. In 1998, he returned to CMU as Principal Systems Scientist to serve as a Directory of the Universal Library, a book scanning project that has now sponsored the scanning of more than 1.5 million books. At that time, he held a joint appointment in the Language Technologies Institute and the Tepper School of Business, teaching analysis of algorithms and intellectual property law. In 1999, he was named Co-Director of the Institute for eCommerce, a joint venture between the School of Computer Science and Tepper, teaching eCommerce Technology, Electronic Payment Systems and Internet Law as part of the Master of Science in Electronic Commerce (MSEC). In 2001, Dr. Shamos was named Distinguished Career Professor. He was then asked to work on the development of a technology version of the MSEC degree using the story-centered curriculum concept pioneered by Roger Schank. Renamed the MSIT in eBusiness Technology, this was the joint effort of about a dozen SCS faculty members, all of whom still teach in the program. Dr. Shamos is now its Director. Since 2001, he has been Visiting Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Hong Kong, where he teaches Electronic Payment Systems each year. From 1980-2004 and then again from 2004-2010, Dr. Shamos has served as statutory examiner of computerized voting system for the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. From 2010 to the present, he has served as an expert witness on behalf of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in alectornic voting matters. He has also inspected voting systems for West Virginia, Nevada, Delaware, Texas and Massachusetts, eventually participating in over 120 examinations. He has testified on several occasions before the U.S. Congress and state legislatures concerning electronic voting. In 2004, he designed and taught a course at CMU entitled "Electronic Voting." See the electronic voting section. Dr. Shamos has served as an expert witness in more than 250 cases involving computer technology. See the full list. Research InterestseBusiness technology, artificial intelligence, electronic voting, graph models of financial systems, experimental mathematics. Education
Academic Experience
Scientific PublicationsBooks
Book Chapters
Articles
Courses Taught 1998-present
Business Experience
Patents
Legal Experience
Bar Admissions (all current)
Expert WitnessView the full list of Dr. Shamos's expert witness engagements. Electronic VotingVoting System ExaminationsDr. Shamos has conducted over 120 voting system examinations for seven states:
Legislative TestimonyDr. Shamos has testifed about electronic voting before various committees of Congress and state legislatures:
Electronic Voting PublicationsBooks
Articles
Published Reports
Non-AcademicBilliardsMy principal outside interest is in the game of billiards and billiard history. I am a Contributing Editor of Billiards Digest magazine, for which I write a momthly column on billiard history and a brief rules column. I am Curator of The Billiard Archive, a Pennsylvania non-profit foundation set up to preserve the game's history. The Billiard Archive holds the largest collection of prints and paintings on the subject of billiard in the United States. I started playing during the 1960s and won the Princeton University Three-Cushion championship in 1968 and placed first the Association of College Unions Eastern Regional Three-Cushion tournamemnt the same year. I have served in various capacities with the Billiard Congress of America, the official governing body of billiards in the United States. Currently I am faculty advisor to the Carnegie Mellon Pool Team.
Billiard Books
BagpipesDr. Shamos studied bagpipe performance with Pipe Major Sandy Jones of the U.S. Air Force Pipe Band (now retired from The Citadel) and the late John MacFadyen of Glasgow. He was proofreader for the revised edition of the Scots Guards Standard Settings of Pipe Music when the regiment was overseas fighting in the Falkland Islands. He has amassed a large collection of printed bagpipe music and for contributions to bagpipe musicography received the first Black and White Scotch Achiever's Award in 1991.Family
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