[Coin-voting-members] *Revised yet again* Election ballot, 2013 -- 2014 SLB and TLC directors
Lou Hafer
lou at cs.sfu.ca
Mon Jan 20 11:16:38 EST 2014
Folks,
Apparently my brain never made it back from the holidays. It's been
pointed out to me that Ted Ralphs ought to be one of the TLC candidates
and Haroldo Santo isn't up for reelection until 2015. Fixed below.
Apologies for the third ballot.
As with the previous revision, those of you who have already
returned your ballot may want to revise your vote and submit a new
ballot. If I receive a new one, I'll discard the original.
Lou
============= *REVISED yet again ballot* ============================
COIN-OR Ballot
In each category below, you may vote for as many candidates as you like.
The candidates receiving the most votes will be elected. Candidate bios
appear at the end of this message. Candidates recruited after October
31, 2013 (the nominal deadline for nomination) are indicated on the
ballot as write-in candidates. All candidates are recommended by the
current Directors.
Please email your completed ballot to election at coin-or.org.
Strategic Leadership Board
Four (4) to be elected. *NOTE* that we do not have four nominated
candidates. Type an X in the brackets '[ ]' to vote for a candidate, or
type in a name for a write-in vote. You may vote for as many candidates
as you like.
[ ] Matt Saltzman
[ ] Andrew Mason
[ ] Write-in: ___Alan King___
[ ] Write-in: _______________
Technical Leadership Council
Three (3) to be elected. Type an X in the brackets '[ ]' to vote for a
candidate, or type in a name for a write-in vote. You may vote for as
many candidates as you like.
[ ] Miles Lubin
[ ] Ted Ralphs
[ ] Write-in: ___Tony Kelman___
[ ] Write-in: _________________
------------------
Candidate bios
------------------
Tony Kelman
===========
Tony Kelman is a Ph.D student in the Department of Mechanical
Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. His research
interests are in real-time online optimization for model predictive
control (MPC) of large-scale and nonlinear systems, particularly for
energy applications. He has developed the Berkeley Library for
Optimization Modeling, which is a toolbox for creating MPC optimization
formulations in Simulink, using COIN-OR Ipopt as a solver. His
contributions to COIN-OR include updating the build system for the
Matlab mex interface to Ipopt to simplify building across Linux, Mac,
and Windows platforms, as well as compiling statically-linked mex files
that can be distributed and function across multiple versions of Matlab.
He is currently participating in the ongoing effort to update BuildTools
to use recent GNU autotools versions, and make structural improvements
to facilitate building Windows DLL's of COIN-OR solvers using MinGW
compilers.
Alan King
=========
Alan King is a research staff member with the Mathematical Sciences
department at IBM's Thomas J Watson Research Center. His research
interest focuses on optimization technologies for decision-making under
uncertainty. He has contributed to a range of areas in Stochastic
Programming, including: sample approximation theory, parallel
decomposition, options pricing duality, high throughput task dispatch,
high performance stream computing, and algebraic modeling for stochastic
programs. Alan has been project manager for the COIN-OR SMI project
since 2000, and recently began a stochastic program modeling
collaboration with COIN-OR's FlopC++. Working with Robin Lougee, Alan
helped organize the first Coin Cup award committee in 2002 and
co-chaired the "John Forrest-fest | COIN-OR 10th Anniversary"
celebration at the Austin INFORMS annual meeting.
Miles Lubin
===========
Miles Lubin is a Ph.D. student in the Operations Research Center at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Before this, he worked at Argonne
National Laboratory in Chicago on parallel algorithms for large-scale
stochastic programming problems. As a result of this work, he received
the 2013 COIN-OR Cup for modifying the simplex basis factorization
routines of CoinUtils to perform a customized factorization within a
parallel implementation of the simplex method. His current work on
optimization software includes JuMP, an open-source modeling language
built on top of Julia, a new language for scientific computing, which
has links to COIN-OR solvers. Miles is interested in improving
cross-platform usability of COIN-OR software and has recently assumed
maintainership of the COIN-OR packages in Debian.
Andrew Mason
============
Andrew Mason is a Senior Lecturer in the Dept of Engineering Science at
the University of Auckland and, until recently, was President of the
Operations Research Society of New Zealand. He created and maintainsthe
open source Excel add-in OpenSolver which was awarded the COIN-OR Cupin
2011. OpenSolver, which uses the CBC solver, has now been downloaded
over 60,000 times and has an active community of OR practitioners. His
efforts to make optimisation and COIN-OR software more accessible
include developing SolverStudio which allowsmodels written using PuLP,
Pyomo and other formal modelling languages to be used within Excel.
Ted Ralphs
==========
Ted Ralphs is an associate professor in the Department of Industrial and
Systems Engineering at Lehigh University. He is co-founder and director
of the Laboratory for Computational Optimization Research and chairs
Lehigh's High-performance Computing Steering Committee. He is a current
member of the Strategic Leadership Board and current chair of the
Technical Leadership Council. He serves in an editorial capacity on
several journals and is a topical editor for the Encyclopedia of
Operations Research and Management Science. His research is in
computational optimization and high-performance computing. His interests
include development of theory and methodology for solving single-level,
multi-level, multi-stage, and multi-objective integer programs,
development of parallel search algorithms, development of open source
software, and applications of integer programming.
Matthew Saltzman
=============
Matthew Saltzman is Associate Professor of Mathematical Sciences at
Clemson University. His research interests are in computational
optimization -- particularly discrete optimization -- and
high-performance computing. He has been involved in COIN-OR since 2000
and is the founding president of the Foundation. He is the project
manager of the OSI (Open Solver Interface) project, co-designer of
CHiPPS, and a member of the development teams for CLP and CBC. He is an
active INFORMS member, Vice Chair (and Chair Elect) of the INFORMS
Computing Society, former editor-in-chief of INFORMS Online, and former
VP for Information Technology.
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