The Boston Consulting Group (Bcg)
Project Leader
Stanford University Jul 2012 - Sep 2017
Graduate Student Researcher
Allied Minds Aug 2015 - May 2016
Allied Minds Fellow
Uc Berkeley Aug 2011 - Jun 2012
Graduate Student Research Assistant
University of Florida May 2010 - Aug 2011
Undergraduate Research Assistant
Education:
Stanford University 2012 - 2017
Doctorates, Doctor of Philosophy, Materials Science, Engineering, Philosophy
University of California, Berkeley 2011 - 2012
University of Florida 2007 - 2011
Bachelors, Bachelor of Science, Materials Science, Engineering
Skills:
Materials Science Afm Spectroscopy Powder X Ray Diffraction Nanomaterials Pulsed Laser Deposition Thin Films Solid State Physics Python C++
The company behind punched cards, floppy disks and the Jeopardy-winning computer system Watson traces its roots to 1911, when New York financier Charles Flint merged three manufacturing companies, creating the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company. In time, the company moved away from its computing
A hundred years ago, on June 16, 1911, Charles Flint, also known as the "father of trusts" because of rubber and chewing gum conglomerates he created in the late 1890s, did a mashup of a bunch of hardware companies that sold meat scales and cheese slicers, time recording equipment (the punch clock),
IBM began life as Computing-Tabulating-Recording Co. (C-T-R), a rag-tag amalgamation of pseudo-information companies assembled in an acquisition by Wall Street financier Charles Flint in 1911. C-T-R was flailing when it hired Watson to take charge in 1914. Morale was down. The division managers foug
--1911: Incorporation on June 16 of the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company (C-T-R), which merges Bundy, the Tabulating Machine Co., the Computing Scale Company and the International Time Recording Co. Headed by trust organizer Charles Flint, the company has 1,300 employees.