Chris Wallace (computer scientist)
For other uses, see Chris Wallace (disambiguation).
Christopher Stewart Wallace was an Australian computer scientist and physicist.
Wallace is notable for having devised:
- The minimum message length principle — an information-theoretic principle in statistics, econometrics, machine learning, inductive inference and knowledge discovery which can be seen both as a mathematical formalisation of Occam's Razor and as an invariant Bayesian method of model selection and point estimation,
- The Wallace tree form of binary multiplier,
- a variety of random number generators,
- a theory in physics and philosophy that entropy is not the arrow of time,
- a refrigeration system,
- hardware for detecting and counting cosmic rays,
- design of computer operating systems,
- the notion of universality probability in mathematical logic,
- and a vast range of other works - see, e.g., and its , pp .
Wallace received his PhD from the University of Sydney in 1959. He was married to Judy Ogilvie, the first secretary and programme librarian of SILLIAC, which was launched on the 12 of September 1956 at the University of Sydney and which was one of Australia's first computers. He also engineered one of the world's first Local Area Networks in the mid-1960s.