Jonathan Ledlie is a computer scientist and software engineer focused on applied networked systems.
His PhD research studied the performance of network coordinates in wide-area, real-life systems. He was advised by Margo Seltzer, Jim Waldo, and Michael Mitzenmacher at Harvard.
As a research scientist at Nokia from 2007-2012, Jonathan conducted research on services for emerging markets, indoor positioning systems, and inexpensive smartphones. Much of this research was joint with MIT and other universities.
Jonathan is currently a software engineer at a small start-up in Cambridge, MA.
Please see LinkedIn for more information.
Past Research and Software Projects
- Metro Note, a Simplenote client for Windows Phone
- Nokia Open Emerging Market Services: Mosoko, Tangaza, and Crowd Translation
- Organic Indoor Localization and Mobile Organic Indoor Localization Engine (Molé) (Jointly with MIT)
- Ukairo: Decentralized Detour Routing in Internet-Scale Networks (Jointly with Imperial College London)
- Network Coordinates: Internet-scale latency estimation and Pyxida
- SBON: a Stream-Based Overlay Network
- Hourglass: an infrastructure for connecting sensor networks and applications
- Provenance-Aware Storage Systems
- Load Balancing in Peer-to-Peer Systems
- Self-Organizing Storage
- Damelo! An Explicitly Co-locating Web Cache File System
- OS Scheduling for Simultaneous Multithreading Processors
- Delay-Tolerant Streaming Database Joins