About the Author(s)

  Eldar Fischer
  Faculty of Computer Science
  Technion -- Israel Institute of Technology
  Technion City, Haifa 32000, Israel
  eldar[ta]cs[td]technion[td]ac[td]il
  
http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/users/eldar
  

Eldar Fischer completed his Ph. D. in 1999 at Tel-Aviv University under the supervision of Noga Alon and has been a member of the Faculty of Computer Science at the Israel Institute of Technology (the Technion) since 2001. His main interests lie in the analysis of algorithms, especially sublinear ones, but he is also known to dabble in Formal Logic and to investigate the odd combinatorial graph-theoretic question. His main extra-curricular interest centers on board and card games, especially the less well known ones.

  Lance Fortnow
  Department of Computer Science
  University of Chicago
  1100 E 58th St., Chicago, IL 60637, USA
  fortnow[ta]cs[td]uchicago[td]edu
  http://people.cs.uchicago.edu/~fortnow
  

Lance Fortnow received his Ph. D. under Michael Sipser in Applied Mathematics at MIT in 1989. He has spent his academic career at the University of Chicago with the exception of a senior research scientist postion at the NEC Research Institute from 1999 to 2003. In 1992 he received the NSF Presidential Faculty Fellowship and was a Fulbright Scholar visiting CWI in Amsterdam 1996-97. Fortnow studies computational complexity and its applications to electronic commerce, quantum computation, bioinformatics, learning theory and cryptography. His early work on interactive proofs precipitated the development of probabilistically checkable proofs and inapproximability theory. Fortnow writes the popular scientific and academic weblog Computational Complexity.