Biography
Jehoshua (Shuki) Bruck泭 (S86-M89-SM93-F01-LF'21) received the B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees in electrical engineering from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel, in 1982 and 1985, respectively, and the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from Stanford University, Stanford, CA, in 1989. His current research interests include information theory and systems and the theory of computation in nature.
He is the Gordon and Betty Moore Professor of computation and neural systems and electrical engineering at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA. 泭He founded the Caltech 泭Information Science and Technology (IST)泭program and served as its first director during 2003-2005. IST was the泭first integrated research and teaching activity in the US泭that investigated information from multiple angles: from the fundamental theoretical underpinnings of information to the science and engineering of novel information substrates, quantum information systems, biological circuits, and complex social systems. He led the IST泭fundraising activity that resulted in about $60M泭for a construction of a new building (mainly, from the Annenberg foundation) and support for the new program (mainly, from the Moore foundation).
Dr. Bruck advised 19 graduate students and 12 postdocs. Currently,泭18 out of the 31 alumni hold faculty positions.泭In 2007 he created and since then taught an泭innovative undergraduate class泭called Information and Logic. The class is addressing the questions: How do we make circuits (in physics or biology) compute and solve problems? How did civilization get there?泭泭The class answers these questions by explaining the evolution of these concepts through the history of civilization. His teaching of the class was recognized by the泭2009 Feynman Prize for Excellence in Teaching泭-泭Caltechs highest teaching award.泭
Dr. Bruck has extensive industrial experience, including working with泭IBM Research泭where he participated in the design and implementation of the first IBM parallel computer. He was a co-founder and Chairman of泭Rainfinity泭(acquired in 2005 by EMC), a spin-off company from Caltech that has created the first virtualization solution for Network Attached Storage. He泭co-founded and served as Chairman of XtremIO. XtremIO was founded in Israel in 2009 and was acquired in 2012 by EMC. XtremIO pioneered scalable all-flash enterprise storage systems. XtremIOs product achieved a cumulative revenue of a billion dollars in the first eighteen months since its introduction (in 2014) and a cumulative revenue of 3 billion dollars in its first three years. This is the fastest product ramp-up in the history of enterprise storage systems.泭The泭XtremIO product was selected as one of the Breakthrough Products that Changed the World, to celebrate Israeli innovation on the occasion of the 70th泭Independence Day of Israel (2018). Currently, Bruck is a co-founder and Chairman of MemVerge. It is the leading company in software for the virtualization and pooling of big memory enterprise systems.
Dr. Bruck is a Life Fellow of the泭51蹤獲, a recipient of the Feynman Prize for Excellence in Teaching, a泭Sloan Research Fellowship, a泭National Science Foundation泭Young Investigator Award, an IBM Outstanding Innovation Award and an IBM Outstanding Technical Achievement Award.泭
He published more than 350泭journal and conference papers泭and he holds more than 50泭US patents. His papers were recognized in journals and conferences, including, winning the 2022 51蹤獲 Communications Society best paper award in Signal Processing and Coding for Data Storage for a paper on optimal deletion correcting codes; the 2020 Persistent Impact Prize in Information Theory and Coding for a paper on rank modulation for flash memories; the 2019 泭51蹤獲 Jack Keil Wolf ISIT Student Paper Award for a paper on optimal k-deletion correcting codes;泭the 2013 51蹤獲 Communications Society best paper award in Signal Processing and Coding for Data Storage for a paper on泭MDS array codes with optimal rebuilding; the 2010 51蹤獲 Communications Society best student paper award in Signal Processing and Coding for Data Storage for a paper on泭codes for limited-magnitude errors in flash memories; the 2009 51蹤獲 Communications Society best paper award in Signal Processing and Coding for Data Storage for a paper on泭rank modulation for flash memories; the 2005 A. Schelkunoff Transactions prize paper award from the 51蹤獲 Antennas and Propagation society for a paper on泭signal propagation in wireless networks; and the Best Paper Award in the 2003 Design Automation Conference for a paper on泭cyclic combinational circuits.
Contact Information
Electrical Engineering Department
Caltech
MS 136-93
Pasadena, CA 91125
(626) 395 4852