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Advisors/Directors
Sheldon Lowenthal
slowenthal@sagealliances.com
Mr. Lowenthal graduated with a SB from MIT in Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science in 1975, where he was chosen
by the faculty as a finalist to receive 'the top thesis'
award, and then graduated with an MSEE from RPI in 1976.
Since graduation he has both developed and managed the
development of a very wide range of 'leading edge' hardware,
software, and systems products.
In 1996 he cofounded Terascape. Terascape developed software
to manage disks and disk farms and to dramatically increase
the performance of Oracle databases. He co-wrote the business
plan and obtained venture capital. As VP of Software
Engineering he then architected and designed the product, and
performed 'hands-on' development while simultaneoeusly
managing the development team. Within 4 years sold the company
to EMC for approximately $50 million.
Prior to Terascape - in the roles of a Director of Engineering
or a VP of Engineeering - he was at Cambex, ICOT, Alloy
Computer Products, Telphi Systems, and Lexidata.
At Cambex he started the Unix division to develop Unix system
utilities and drivers for: tape systems, a variety of single
and multiple enclosure disk drive systems, and 'highly
available and high performance' disk arrays supporting
multiple paths.
At ICOT he managing the software development of IBM emulation
and mainframe connectivity software, and he personally
developed: interface cards, a windowed product configuration
program, a DMA device driver, the Multi-PU SNA gateway, and
S3G graphic display software.
At Alloy Computer Products he designed IBM personal computer
peripherals for tape and disk products as well as a high
performance multiprocessor multiuser DOS system.
At Telphi Systems he was responsible the development of a
'feature rich' telephone PBX that was specifically designed
for use in hospitals and the medical community.
While at Lexidata, in 6 years he was a major force in their
rapid growth from less than $800,000 and only 12 employees to
$37 million in and over 450 employees.
His article "Multiprocessors Equip Terminals for High
Level Graphics" was published in Electronics magazine in
March 1983.
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