Professional

Dr. Brad J. Cox
9940 Bent Tree Lane
Manassas VA 20111-4234
Days 703-361-4751
Evenings 703-368-1174
Email bcox@virtualschool.edu
Web virtualschool.edu
Resumes
Industrial ( HTML | TEXT | Word | PDF )
Academic ( HTML | TEXT | Word | PDF )
Selected Publications
Evololving a Distributed Learning Community (PDF)
Objects as Property (PDF)
Planning the Software Industrial Revolution (PDF)
Plan for a New University advocates a new meaning of university that delivers Rigor and Relevance, Education and Training, and Individual and Organizational Learning as a seamless whole.

Background

Dr. Cox left the George Mason University Program on Social and Organizational Learning (PSOL) in 1998 to pursue long-standing interests in distance education and digital commerce. PSOL is an interdisciplinary department that concentrates on overcoming socioeeconomic and technical obstacles to change, development and learning as firms transition to a global information-intensive economy. His educational interests are in applying internet, television, and groupware technology to expedite experiential and collaborative learning in the academy, the home, the workplace and the world.

His courses include Taming the Electronic Frontier, Internet Literacy, and Advanced Object Technology. All involve distance education. He is presently developing a new course, Computational Modeling of Social Learning to explore agent-based simulations inspired by Michael Rothschild's book, Bionomics and work at the Santa Fe Institute and elsewhere.

He authored Object-oriented Programming, An Evolutionary Approach, a book that is generally credited with launching today's industry-wide enthusiasm for object technology. His second book, Superdistribution: Objects as Property on the Electronic Frontier, which proposes superdistribution as a technosocial solution to the problematics of buying, selling and owning property made of bits as distinct from the atoms from which goods have been composed since antiquity.

He founded the Coalition for Electronic Markets whose objective is to build and deploy a nationwide revenue collection infrastructure for commerce in electronic goods.

He cofounded the Stepstone Corporation where he originated the Objective-C programming language and Software-IC libraries.

At Schlumberger-Doll Research, he applied artificial intelligence, object-oriented, Unix, and workstation technologies to oil field wireline services.

At the Programming Technology Center at ITT, he applied Unix and object-oriented technologies in support of the development of a large, highly distributed telephone switching system, System 1240.

His Ph.D. from the University of Chicago is for theoretical and experimental work in neurophysiology in an area since known as neural networks. His post-graduate experimental studies were at the National Institutes of Health and at the Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratories.



Modification date: March 28, 2004 © Copyright 2004 by Brad Cox
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