Hari Balakrishnan
My research is in the area of networked
computer systems. Over the past few years, my interests have spanned overlay
and peer-to-peer networks; Internet architecture, routing, and congestion
control; wireless and sensor networks; network security; and distributed data
management. A somewhat dated summary (from Fall 2005) of some of my research
and teaching activities is here (5 pages).
I lead the Networks and Mobile Systems (NMS) group at CSAIL. Most of
my papers
and group's software are
available online. My older (pre-1999) papers and software, are also
available.
Current Research
- Wireless networks
- The CarTel mobile sensor network and
telematics system, which includes the Cabernet content delivery network
for vehicles using opportunistic WiFi for connectivity; predictive delay
modeling and traffic-optimized routing, and the Pothole
Patrol (P2) road surface monitoring system, among other efforts.
- Wireless
mesh and sensornet MAC and routing protocols; of late, these involve a
project on Bit-Switched
Wireless Networks, which builds on the SoftPHY abstraction, conflict maps,
and symbol-level network coding for improving wireless concurrency
(spatial reuse) Also
work on various interference mitigation techniques.
- Wavescope: a high data-rate
sensor computing system (joint relational data stream and signal
processing, with high-rate sensornet protocols).
- Network architecture
- Data management systems
Previous projects
Teaching
This term (spring
08) I'm teaching 6.829 and co-teaching 6.02.
- 6.02 Intro to EECS-II ("from Fourier transforms to the
Internet")
Spring 08 |
Fall 07 | Spring 07
·
6.033 Computer Systems
Engineering
Spring 05 | Spring 04 (50% lectures) | Spring 02 (recitations) | Spring 00 (50% lectures +
recitations) | Spring '99
(recitations)
·
6.829 Computer Networks
Fall 08 | Fall 05 (HKN review)| Fall 03 (HKN review) | Fall 02 (HKN review) | Fall 01 (HKN review) | Fall 00 (6.899) HKN review | Fall 99 (6.892) HKN review | Fall 98 (6.896) HKN review
Students/Postdocs
Current PhD
students: Bret Hull | Katrina
LaCurts | Neha Gupta | Stan Rost | Lenin Sivalingam | Arvind Thiagarajan (with Madden)
| Mythili Vutukuru
Current postdoc: Ramki Gummadi.
I also work with some PhD students advised
by other faculty, notably Sachin Katti (Katabi), Ben Vandiver (Liskov) and Yang Zhang (Madden).
Previous PhD and MEng students and their
theses are here. Graduated PhD students include:
- David Andersen (December '04,
winner of a Sprowls Award for best MIT CS thesis), now Assistant Professor
of CS at CMU.
- Magdalena Balazinska
(December '05), now Assistant Professor of CSE at the Univ. of Washington.
- Nick Feamster (September
'05, Sprowls award Honorable Mention), now Assistant Professor of CS at
Georgia Tech.
- Wendi Heinzelman (June
'00, co-supervised w/ Prof. Chandrakasan), now Associate Professor of ECE
at Rochester.
- Kyle Jamieson (June 2008), now
Assistant Professor at University College, London.
- Jaeyeon Jung (May 2006), now
at Intel Research after a stint at Mazu Networks.
- Allen Miu (May 2006), now at
Ruckus Wireless.
- Nissanka
Bodhi Priyantha (May '05, winner of a Sprowls Award for best MIT CS
thesis), now at Microsoft Research.
- Alex Snoeren (December '02,
Sprowls Honorable Mention), now
Assistant
Associate Professor of CSE at UC San Diego.
- Michael Walfish (November
2007), soon-to-be Assistant Professor of CS at UT Austin (currently
post-doc at Stanford).
Jakob
Eriksson was a post-doc with me (Aug 2006-July 2008) and will soon be an
Assistant Professor at the University of Illinois, Chicago.
Lewis Girod was a post-doc with
me (Feb 2006-Jan 2008) and is now a Research Scientist at CSAIL.
Can Emre Koksal was a post-doc
with me (2002-2004) and is now an Assistant Professor of ECE at The Ohio State
University.
Personal Information
- Ph.D.
(Berkeley), 1998; M.S. (Berkeley), 1995; B. Tech. (IIT Madras), 1993; High
school (KVIIT, Madras), 1989.
- Short bio
- My sister, Hamsa Balakrishnan, is an
Assistant Professor at MIT (Aero/Astro). She finished her PhD Stanford in
2006 and was at NASA before coming to MIT in 2007.
- My mother and father are both theoretical
physicists.
- My academic ancestry.