About
Justin Rattner
Justin
Rattner is an Intel Senior Fellow and director of Intel's Corporate
Technology Group. He also serves as the corporation’s
chief technology officer (CTO). He is responsible for leading
Intel's microprocessor, communications and systems technology
labs and Intel Research.
In 1989, Rattner was named Scientist of the Year by R&D
Magazine for his leadership in parallel and distributed computer
architecture. In December 1996, Rattner was featured as Person
of the Week by ABC World News for his visionary work on the
Department of Energy ASCI Red System, the first computer to
sustain one trillion operations per second (one teraFLOPS) and
the fastest computer in the world between 1996 and 2000. In
1997, Rattner was honored as one of the Computing 200, the 200
individuals having the greatest impact on the U.S. computer
industry today, and subsequently profiled in the book Wizards
and Their Wonders from ACM Press.
Rattner has received two Intel Achievement Awards for his work
in high performance computing and advanced cluster communication
architecture. He is a longstanding member of Intel's Research
Council and Academic Advisory Council. He currently serves as
the Intel executive sponsor for Cornell University where he
serves on the External Advisory Board for the School of Engineering.
Rattner joined Intel in 1973. He was named its first Principal
Engineer in 1979 and its fourth Intel Fellow in 1988. Prior
to joining Intel, Rattner held positions with Hewlett-Packard
Company and Xerox Corporation. He received bachelor's and master's
degrees from Cornell University in Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science in 1970 and 1972, respectively.