Richard Helm recently
rejoined IBM
to start the Australian branch of the Object Technology Practice.
Prior to that, he was a technology consultant with DMR Group, an
international information technology consulting firm. There he
actively applied design patterns to the design of commercial
systems. Prior to DMR, Richard was in the Software Technology department at
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
investigating object-oriented design and reuse and visualization.
Richard has numerous international publications, writes regularly
in Dr. Dobb's Journal, and is a
past OOPSLA program committee member. Richard has a Ph.D. in
Computer Science from the University of Melbourne, Australia.
Ralph Johnson has been studying object-oriented
technology and how it changes the way that software is developed for the past
10 years.
He has been involved in the development of an object-oriented operating
system (Choices), compiler (Typed Smalltalk), graphics editor framework
(HotDraw), music synthesis system (Kyma), and is currently working on
a framework for accounting. He is on the faculty of
the Department of Computer Science at the University of Illinois
and has helped organize several OOPSLA's, including OOPSLA'93 as program chair.
He got his PhD from Cornell.
John Vlissides
is a researcher at the
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center.
His research interests include object-oriented design
tools and techniques, application frameworks and builders, and
program visualization. Before IBM, John was at the Computer
Systems Laboratory at Stanford University. There he co-developed
InterViews, a popular object-oriented system for developing
graphical applications. John has a Ph.D. in electrical
engineering from Stanford University.