Lawrence A. Rowe
Emeritus Professor,
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
University of California, Berkeley
Biographical Information
Professor Lawrence A. Rowe retired from the University in
June 2003 after twenty-seven
years to pursue projects involving the development of streaming media
software, consulting with multimedia research laboratories, and
investing in startup companies.
He was the founding director of the Berkeley Multimedia
Research Center (BMRC), which was created in 1995 to
explore the application of multimedia technology including streaming
media and web-based interactive titles to education and research.
BMRC taught classes on multimedia authoring, established and operated
authoring studios and distributed collaboration and distance learning
rooms and services, and provided advice and technical support on a wide range
of issues relating to multimedia authoring and distributed collaboration.
BMRC closed in 2002 due to a lack of funding and support.
Professor Rowe headed the research group that produced
the Berkeley MPEG-1 Tools,
the Berkeley Multimedia, Interfaces, and Graphics (MIG) Seminar Internet
webcast, and the Open Mash Streaming Media Toolkit. He was also responsible
for the development and deployment of the Berkeley lecture webcasting system.
Earlier in his career he worked on database application development tools and
technologies that were later commercialized by Ingres Corporation.
He received a BA degree in Mathematics and a PhD in
Information and Computer Science from the University of California at
Irvine in 1970 and 1976, respectively.
He is a Fellow of the ACM, past chair of the ACM Special Interest Group
on Multimedia, and has served on many governmental advisory committees.
Professor Rowe has consulted with and served on the Technical Adivsory
Boards of numerous companies, co-founded several companies including
Ingres Corporation, NCast Corporation, and Orinda Software, Inc., and
served on the Board of Directors of Ingres Corporation, NCast Corporation,
and Siemens Technology-to-Business.
Contact Information
I have given up my office at Berkeley, so the best way to contact me is
by email through my Berkeley accounts
(email address: Rowe at the cs "dot" berkeley "dot" edu host)
or by phone (925-218-2221).
Miscellaneous Information
-
The BMRC website continues to
exist but most of the titles, including the streaming media lectures
are no longer operational. Archives of selected past class websites,
project descriptions, publications, instructional guides, and software are
still available at the website. However, the site is not being maintained
or updated.
- Open Mash Streaming Media Toolkit -
Several people, including me, continue to develop the
Open Mash Streaming Media Toolkit created by Steve McCanne
when he was on the Berkeley faculty.
The Open
Mash website, the source management and distribution system, and the
various mailing lists continue to operate. See the website for recent
announcements about new features added to the system. We are currently
working to produce a stable Version 5.3 general release.
- Berkeley MPEG-1 Video Tools -
We developed the tools back
in the early 1990's to assess the suitable of desktop
computers for software encoding and decoding MPEG video. These
tools included the first widely distributed MPEG-1 video decoder
(mpeg_play), encoder (mpeg_encode), and several tools to
analyze how a particular video was encoded. We do not support these tools,
but they continue to be popular for reasons at which I can only guess.
Most desktop systems have better players and encoders available, but you
are welcome to do with the code whatever you want. We published several
papers describing the software including benchmarks on systems available
at the time and recently completed a
revision of the original 1993 ACM
Multimedia Conference paper that will appear in the first issue of
the new ACM Transactions on
Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications in early 2005.
- Berkeley Lecture Webcasts (BIBS System) -
We began regularly schedule webcasts of the
Berkeley MIG Seminar
in January 1995 and continued every week through December 2002 except for
Academic Year 2001-2 when I was on sabbatical. We still have all the video
tapes and the digitized lectures. I am hoping at some point in the future
to produce a DVD with the "greatest hits" lectures from the series.
Sadly, both the MIG Seminar and the class lectures we produced with the
Berkeley Internet Broadcasting System (BIBS) from Fall 1998 semester
through the Spring 2001 semester are no longer accessible. The software
used several servers (see the
BIBS Report for a
description of the system architecture), and it is too difficult to keep
them running with all the maintenance required in our modern spam and virus
infested Internet.
The system was transfered to
Educational Technology Services,
which is a campus support organization on the Berkeley campus.
You can view recent lectures at their website at
http://webcast.berkeley.edu/
- The following links might be useful:
- Curriculm Vitae
- Publications
- Talks
- Masters
and PhD
students and past
industrial visitors
- Course Websites
Last modified: January 26, 2005