Malek Miroslaw
Position | Professor |
Institution | ALaRI |
Address | Office SI-208 (Informatics Building), Via G. Buffi 13, CH-6904 Lugano |
Phone | +41 58 666 4645 |
miroslaw.malek@usi.ch | |
Homepage | http://people.alari.ch/malek |
Course | 2014/2015 2016/2017 2016/2017 2016/2017 2014/2015 |

Miroslaw Malek is a professor at the Advanced Learning and Research Institute (ALaRI). From September 2012 to September 2018 he was Director of the same institute.
Until September 2012 he was professor and holder of Chair in Computer Architecture and Communication at the Department of Computer Science at the Humboldt University in Berlin. His research interests focus on dependable architectures and services in parallel, cloud, distributed and embedded computing environments including failure prediction,
dependable architectures and service availability.
He has participated in two pioneering parallel computer projects, contributed to the theory and practice of parallel network design, developed the comparison-based method for system diagnosis, codeveloped comprehensive WSI and networks testing techniques, proposed the consensus-based framework for responsive (fault-tolerant, real-time) computer systems design and has made numerous other contributions, reflected in over 200 publications and nine books.
He has supervised almost 30 Ph.D. dissertations including three habilitations (ten of his students are professors) and founded, organized and co-organized numerous workshops and conferences.
He served and serves on editorial boards of several journals and is consultant to government and companies on technical and strategic issues in information technology.
Malek received his PhD in Computer Science from the Technical University of Wroclaw in Poland, spent 17 years (1977-1994) as professor at the University of Texas at Austin and was also, among others, visiting professor at Stanford, Universita di Roma La Sapienza, Politecnico di Milano, Keio University, Technical University in Vienna, New York University, Chinese University of Hong Kong, and guest researcher at Bell Laboratories and IBM T.J. Watson Research Center.