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  PDF documents:
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Call for papers (3,5 Mb)
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Poster (8 Mb)
For special sessions organisers (85 kb)
Eurosim2007.pps (7,7 Mb)
 

 

Eugene Kindler

Eugene Kindler was born in 1935 in Prague (Czechoslovak Republic). He studi­ed mathematics at Charles University in Prague and there he got grades of Doctor of philosophy in Logic and Doctor of sciences in theory of programming. The Czechoslovak academy of sciences granted him the grade of Candidate of sciences in physics/mathematics. During his employ­ment in the Prague Research Institute of Mathematical Machines (1958-1966), he participated at the design of the first Czechoslo­vak electronic computer and design­ed and implemented the first Czechoslovak ALGOL com­piler for it. Then, working at the Institute of Biophysics at the Faculty of General Medicine of Charles University (1967-1973), he designed and implemented the first Cze­choslovak si­mulation langua­ge and then introduced the object-oriented programming into Czechoslovakia. Now­adays, as professor emeritus of applied mathematics, he teams up with University in Ostrava and with Charles University in Prague. He was visiting professor at the University in Italian Pisa and at West Virginia Univer­sity in American Morgantown, and invited professor (professeur invité) at the University of South Brit­tany in French Lorient, and at Blaise Pascal University in French Clermont-Ferrand. His main interest con­sists in object-oriented and modeling of systems that handle complex models to improve their own anticipato­ry abili­ties and intelligence. He applied it namely in logis­tic and production systems, for example in participating at two grants supported by the European Commission and oriented to modernization of sea harbors by means of applying computing technique. Beside computer science, he is interested in music. He plays violin and keyboard inst­ruments (piano and organ) and since the eighties of the last century he has directed a singing group performing the Latin, Greek, Armenian and Palaeoslavic chant of the first millennium.

 
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