John T. Riedl (nonfiction)

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John T. Riedl.

John Thomas Riedl (January 16, 1962 – July 15, 2013) was an American computer scientist and the McKnight Distinguished Professor at the University of Minnesota. His published works include highly influential research on the social web, recommendation systems, and collaborative systems.

John Riedl received his B.S. in Mathematics from the University of Notre Dame in 1983 and his M.S. in Computer Science from Purdue University in 1985. He completed his Ph.D. in Computer Science at Purdue University in 1990. He became an Assistant Professor at the University of Minnesota in 1990 and was promoted to Associate Professor in 1996 and again to Professor in 2003.

At the university, he led the GroupLens Research group. In 2012 he was awarded the McKnight Distinguished Professor position. During his time as a professor he advised 16 Ph.D. students who went on to take faculty positions and work at technology companies like Google, PARC, Intel, eBay and the Wikimedia Foundation. He was also the faculty advisor for a long-running project in which twelve undergraduates each year would hone their entrepreneurial and software-development skills by taking charge of the development and maintenance of Chipmark, an online bookmark-sharing service.

He was a founder of the field of recommender systems, social computing, and interactive intelligent user interface systems. In 1996, he co-founded Net Perceptions to commercialize the recommender systems research, which had "an enormous impact on e-commerce and information portals." At the height of the dot-com bubble, Net Perceptions was valued at $1.5 billion and had over 300 employees, but the company was liquidated in 2004.

Riedl died on July 15, 2013 after a 3-year-long battle with melanoma.

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