Daniel Slotnick

Daniel Leonid Slotnick (November 12, 1931 – October 25, 1985) was an American mathematician and computer architect. Slotnick, in papers published with John Cocke in 1958, discussed the use of parallelism in numerical calculations for the first time. He later served as the chief architect of the ILLIAC IV supercomputer. He was the principal investigator on a DARPA contract in the early 1970s that produced the ILLIAC IV and the ARPANET. It was a fairly large operation, with its own building on the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign campus, originally called the Center for Advanced Computation but which is now the Astronomy Building. ILLIAC IV was constructed by the Burroughs Corporation, using special chips made by Fairchild Semiconductor. Because of campus unrest due to the Vietnam war, and the Mansfield amendments, the ILLIAC IV was completed and installed at Ames Research Center instead of the University of Illinois, and Slotnick's DARPA contract was not renewed. In 1985, when the Institute for Defense Analyses and National Security Agency formed their supercomputing research facility in the Washington, D.C. area, Slotnick's widow donated his library to them. In 1987 the first issue of The Journal of Supercomputing contained a tribute to Slotnick.

Slotnick died in Baltimore, Maryland, on October 25, 1985, age 53, from an apparent heart attack while jogging.