Today’s Spotlight uses a photograph taken by Dominick Reuter of Russ Tedrake, associate professor in MIT’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
As a high school student in a Detroit suburb in the 1990s, Russ Tedrake did not fit the standard profile of a future computer science professor. Although he had a talent for math — “I won some of the little math competitions and stuff,” he says — he spent his spare time playing football or soccer with friends rather than hacking code or even playing video games; in fact, he didn’t get his first computer until he was a senior.
He got good grades, but he didn’t find the work very demanding. Read more
As a high school student in a Detroit suburb in the 1990s, Russ Tedrake did not fit the standard profile of a future computer science professor. Although he had a talent for math — “I won some of the little math competitions and stuff,” he says — he spent his spare time playing football or soccer with friends rather than hacking code or even playing video games; in fact, he didn’t get his first computer until he was a senior.
He got good grades, but he didn’t find the work very demanding. Read more
