jeremy condit

jcondit at microsoft.com

(I look a bit different these days.)

about me

I recently joined Microsoft Research as a researcher in the Operating System Group, where I work on HAVOC as well as the Singularity operating system and the Bartok compiler. My research interests include operating systems and programming languages.

I used to be a graduate student in the Computer Science division of the EECS department at UC Berkeley. My thesis was on Deputy, a tool that uses dependent types to improve type safety in C programs. I also worked on Capriccio and on CCured. In earlier lives, I was an undergraduate at Harvard and a software engineer at Tellme Networks.

I'm thrilled to be married to Kristin!

publications

other fun stuff

I've taken several years of Japanese language courses, courtesy of Berkeley's excellent Japanese Language Program.

I (used to) spend lots of time snowboarding in Tahoe, most often at Squaw and Northstar.

I love to juggle!

Interactive fiction can be lots of fun. In particular, I recommend poking around Zarf's web page, which has a number of extremely well-crafted games (my personal favorite is "Spider and Web") among numerous other diversions. I once wrote a z-code interpreter called Zeal.

Grabscrab is an entertaining and incredibly addictive Scrabble variant. I'm also fond of board games such as Settlers of Catan and Puerto Rico, not to mention the age-old game of Go.