Bland Ewing Vitae
- Graduate Study, Entomology, University of California-Berkeley, 1970
- BA, Biological Science, University of California-Irvine, 1965
- Disability due to Huntington's Disease, 1988-- (active scientific
collaboration with BS Yandell, JF Barbieri and RF Luck since 1997)
- Co-founder/Programmer, GraphOn, 1982-1992 (third-party hardware and
software testbed for Apple; first microprocessor-driven graphics
workstation in 1984; disability leave in 1988)
- Scientist/Programmer, SynerTek, 1980-1982 (graphical user interface system
based on Motorola 6809 and later chip technologies)
Founder, MicroGraphics, 1978-1980 (graphics software on KIM, 6502-based
microcomputer)
- Instructor/Scientist, Entomology, University of California-Berkeley,
1969-1978 (taught with Prof. DL Wood for one year "Man and his Environment:
Crisis and Conflicts"; worked under Wood on Integrated Pest Management
project in bark beetles; supervised BS Yandell)
- Research Assistant, Biological Science, University of California-Irvine,
1965-1968 (graduate research on population ethology; studied briefly with
Whittaker; genetic computer simulations on IBM 7090, first solid state
computer)
- Research Assistant, University of California-Riverside, 1960-1964 (various
projects in biological, chemical and mathematical sciences)
- Lab Technician, Section 23, Guidance Techniques Research, Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, 1956-1960 (worked on "Project Deal", the Explorer Satellite
program; mapped satellite trajectories and sited ground stations using IBM
709 vacuum tube-based computer, the largest of its time; initials BE are
etched on Explorer batteries)
- 3,186,872: Continuous gas concentration cell energy conversion, 1 Jun 1965.
(fuel cell)
- 5,274,794: Method and apparatus for transferring coordinate data between a
host computer and display device. With WA Eckert; assigned to GraphOn
Corporation, 22 Jan 1991. (bitmap graphics)
Developed modeling approach focused on event-driven competing risks rather
than on time-driven dynamical models. This provides economies in
computation as well as intuitive, graphical tools for biologists to
directly incorporate their knowledge of field events that generate results
that can be tested in the field.
- Ewing Bibliography
Return to Ewing page.
Brian Yandell
(yandell@stat.wisc.edu)