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         Dantzig George:     more books (75)
  1. The Basic George B. Dantzig (Stanford Business Books)
  2. Linear Programming and Extensions by George Dantzig, 1998-08-03
  3. Linear Programming 2: Theory and Extensions by George B. Dantzig, Mukund N. Thapa, 2003-07-30
  4. Studies in Optimization (Studies in mathematics) by George Bernard Dantzig, 1974-07
  5. Linear Programming: 1: Introduction (Springer Series in Operations Research and Financial Engineering) (v. 1) by George B. Dantzig, Mukund N. Thapa, 1997-01-27
  6. Mathematics of the Decision Sciences: Part 2 (Pt. 2)
  7. Mathematical Programming: Essays in Honor of George B. Dantzig, Part II (Mathematical Programming Study) (Pt. 2)
  8. Mathematical Programming: Pt. 1: Essays in Honour of George B.Dantzig ("Mathematical Programming Studies ")
  9. American Statisticians: Charles Sanders Peirce, George Dantzig, Herman Hollerith, W. Edwards Deming, Persi Diaconis, George Gallup
  10. George Bernard Dantzig: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2000
  11. Numeriker (20. Jahrhundert): Cornelius Lanczos, Gene H. Golub, Friedrich Ludwig Bauer, George Dantzig, Eduard Stiefel, Hans Georg Bock (German Edition)
  12. Biography - Dantzig, George Bernard (1914-2005): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by Gale Reference Team, 2005-01-01
  13. University of Maryland, College Park Alumni: Jim Henson, George Dantzig, Robert L. Forward, Valerie Solanas, Sergey Brin, Larry David
  14. Computer Scientists: List of Computer Scientists, George Dantzig, Ajay Kapur, Pranav Mistry, Peter Coad, Allan Alcorn, Helmuth Orthner

1. Dantzig
Translate this page dantzig george Bernard américain, 1914- Travaux en programmation linéaire algorithmes de résolution de systèmes d'inéquations
http://www.sciences-en-ligne.com/momo/chronomath/chrono2/dantzig.html
DANTZIG George Bernard
, x , ...x n du simplexe , trouvant leurs applications en von Neumann Tucker Euler Pour en savoir plus : Guelfand (Gelfand) Choquet

2. About "George B. Dantzig"
George B. Dantzig. Library Home Full Table of Contents Suggesta Link Library Help Visit this site http//www.stanford.edu
http://mathforum.org/library/view/18030.html
George B. Dantzig
Library Home
Full Table of Contents Suggest a Link Library Help
Visit this site: http://www.stanford.edu/dept/eesor/people/faculty/dantzig/ Author: Description: A Stanford professor and one of the founders of the field of operations research. Brief biography, list of publications, and contact information. Levels: Research Languages: English Resource Types: Articles Books Math Topics: Operations Research
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3. George B Dantzig - ResearchIndex Document Query
Searching for PHRASE george b dantzig. Restrict to Header Title Order by CitationsHubs Usage Date 10 documents found. Order citations weighted by year.
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/cs?q=George B. Dantzig

4. M·Casquilho, IST: G. Dantzig
George Dantzig. Born 8 Nov 1914 in Portland, Oregon, USA. George Dantzig studiedmathematics at the University of Maryland, receiving his AB in 1936.
http://alfa.ist.utl.pt/~mcasquil/text/opi/o_Dantzig_G.html
George Dantzig
Born: 8 Nov 1914 in Portland, Oregon, USA
George Dantzig studied mathematics at the University of Maryland, receiving his A.B. in 1936. The following year he received an M.A. in mathematics from the University of Michigan. Dantzig worked as a Junior Statistician in the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics from 1937 to 1939, then, from 1941 to 1946, he was head of the Combat Analysis Branch, U.S.A.F. Headquarters Statistical Control. He received his doctorate in mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1946. In that year he was appointed Mathematical Advisor for USAF Headquarters. In 1947 Dantzig made the contribution to mathematics for which he is most famous, the simplex method of optimisation. It grew out of his work with the U.S. Air Force where he become an expert on planning methods solved with desk calculators. In fact this was known as "programming", a military term that, at that time, referred to plans or schedules for training, logistical supply or deployment of men. Dantzig mechanised the planning process by introducing "linear programming", where "programming" has the military meaning explained above. The importance of linear programming methods was described, in 1980, by Laszlo Lovasz who wrote:-

5. Advanced Search View Basket Your Account Order Status Help Home
Your search for dantzig+george+b+ yielded 1 results using authorDisplaying results 1 to 1. 1. Linear Programming and Extensions
http://www.countrybookshop.co.uk/cgi-bin/search.pl?searchtype=author&searchtext=

6. INFORMS George B. Dantzig Dissertation Award
learn more about george dantzig. Purpose The george B. dantzig Award is given for the best dissertation in any area of
http://www.informs.org/Prizes/DantzigAward.html
Go to INFORMS Page ... INFORMS Home What's New Info for Members Info for Nonmembers Conferences Education/Students Employment Prizes Publications Subdivisions Searchable Databases Links About this Web Site INFORMS Online Bookstore Discussion Search
George B. Dantzig
Dissertation Award
learn more about George Dantzig Purpose: The George B. Dantzig Award is given for the best dissertation in any area of operations research and the management sciences that is innovative and relevant to practice. This award has been established to encourage academic research that combines theory and practice and stimulates greater interaction between doctoral students (and their advisors) and the world of practice. The award is given at the Fall National Meeting.
Application Process The George B. Dantzig Dissertation Award Committee is now accepting entries for the 2003 award. The award for the best OR/MS dissertation serves to promote greater interaction between academia and industry by encouraging researchers to conduct innovative research that is relevant to practice in any area of operations research and management science. The first and second place winners will receive awards of $800 and $400 respectively. Additional finalists will receive honorable mentions with $100 awards. Prizes will be awarded at the INFORMS Fall National Meeting. Each entry must:
  • Consist of a doctoral dissertation written primarily by the entrant no more than 15 months prior to the submission deadline and not previously submitted (between April 15, 2002 and July 15, 2003).
  • 7. Dantzig
    dantzig, george Bernard Estadístico y económetra norteamericano nacido en Portland (Oregón) en 1914. Realizó sus estudios en las Universidades de Maryland y Berkeley en la que se doctoró en matemáticas en 1946.
    http://www.joramon.com/dicciona/personas/dantzig.htm
    Dantzig , George Bernard Estadístico y económetra norteamericano nacido en Portland (Oregón) en 1914. Realizó sus estudios en las Universidades de Maryland y Berkeley en la que se doctoró en matemáticas en 1946. Ha sido profesor en las Universidades de Berkeley y Stanford. Considerado como el creador de la programación lineal, aportó un método para resolver los problemas de tipo lineal a través del llamado "método simplex o de Dantzig". Su obra más conocida es Maximization of a Linear Function of Variables Subject to Linear Inequalities (1974) y Linear Programming and Extensions

    8. The George B. Dantzig Prize
    search The george B. dantzig Prize. Principal Guidelines
    http://www.siam.org/prizes/dantzig.htm
    search:
    The George B. Dantzig Prize
    Principal Guidelines
    The prize, established in 1979, is awarded jointly by the Mathematical Programming Society (MPS) and the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM). The prize is awarded for original research, which by its originality, breadth and scope, is having a major impact on the field of mathematical programming.
    Prize Committee
    There will be an ad hoc prize committee appointed for each award jointly by the chair of MPS and the president of SIAM. The committee will consist of four members, one designated "Chair" by the chair of MPS, and it will represent a diversified view of mathematical programming. Committee appointments should be made at least two years before the prize award date. The MPS has the responsibility to notify its chair and the president of SIAM to make the appointments. For continuity, committee members will normally serve on two successive prize committees with the committee chair being a second-term member. Thus, two new members will be appointed and two members will be re-appointed every three years. Committee members will be members of MPS and/or SIAM. At least two members of the committee will be MPS members and at least two will be members of SIAM. The membership of the committee should also reflect the international character of the Societies.

    9. Professor George Dantzig, Stanford Operations Research Dept.
    Professor george dantzig Linear Programming Founder Turns 80 SIAM News, November 1994
    http://www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rrw1/opt95/dantzig.html
    Professor George Dantzig:
    Linear Programming Founder Turns 80
    SIAM News, November 1994
    In spite of impressive developments in computational optimization in the last 20 years, including the rapid advance of interior point methods, the simplex method, invented by George B. Dantzig in 1947, has stood the test of time quite remarkably: It is still the pre-eminent tool for almost all applications of linear programming. Dantzig, who turns 80 on November 8, is generally regarded as one of the three founders of linear programming, along with von Neumann and Kantorovich. Through his research in mathematical theory, computation, economic analysis, and applications to industrial problems, he has contributed more than any other researcher to the remarkable development of linear programming. Dantzig's work has been recognized by numerous honors, among them the National Medal of Science (1975), the John von Neumann Theory Prize of the Operations Research Society of America and the Institute of Management Sciences (1974), and membership in the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. But he has his own basis for judging his work: "The final test of any theory," he said in the opening sentence of his 1963 book Linear Programming and Extensions , "is its capacity to solve the problems which originated it."

    10. E-Optimization.com
    A year later, george dantzig welcomes us into his home as our first Optimization Trailblazer interview.
    http://www.e-optimization.com/directory/trailblazers/dantzig
    site exploration
    Optimization Trailblazers
    • About
    • Credentials
    • Trailblazers Home

        Among the early pioneers in the field whom I admired were economists: Alan Manne, Harry Markowitz, Tjalling Koopmans, Kenneth Arrow, Robert Dorfman, and Wassily Leontief; mathematicians: Johnny von Neumann, David Gale, Harold Kuhn, Lloyd Shapley, Al Tucker, Herb Scarf, and Ralph Gomory; and at the Pentagon: Marshall Wood and Murray Geisler. There were many others who also recognized the potential of linear and mathematical programming and made major contributions to the field."

        George Dantzig
        In May 2000, e-Optimization.com launched with George Dantzig as the first member of our Who's Who. A year later, George Dantzig welcomes us into his home as our first Optimization Trailblazer interview. The Father of Linear Programming discusses a career that encompasses many of optimization's milestones, described with his distinctive wit, humor, and humility. "My father was a mathematician who wrote popular books on mathematics. His most famous is his book entitled Number: The Language of Science.

    11. Dantzig_George
    george dantzig. Born 8 Nov 1914 in Portland, Oregon, USA. george dantzig studiedmathematics at the University of Maryland, receiving his AB in 1936.
    http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Dantzig_George.html
    George Dantzig
    Born: 8 Nov 1914 in Portland, Oregon, USA
    Click the picture above
    to see two larger pictures Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
    George Dantzig studied mathematics at the University of Maryland, receiving his A.B. in 1936. The following year he received an M.A. in mathematics from the University of Michigan. Dantzig worked as a Junior Statistician in the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics from 1937 to 1939, then, from 1941 to 1946, he was head of the Combat Analysis Branch, U.S.A.F. Headquarters Statistical Control. He received his doctorate in mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1946. In that year he was appointed Mathematical Advisor for USAF Headquarters. In 1947 Dantzig made the contribution to mathematics for which he is most famous, the simplex method of optimisation. It grew out of his work with the U.S. Air Force where he become an expert on planning methods solved with desk calculators. In fact this was known as "programming", a military term that, at that time, referred to plans or schedules for training, logistical supply or deployment of men. Dantzig mechanised the planning process by introducing "linear programming", where "programming" has the military meaning explained above. The importance of linear programming methods was described, in 1980, by Laszlo Lovasz who wrote:-

    12. Dantzig_George
    Biography of george dantzig (19140BC) george dantzig. Born 8 Nov 1914 in Portland, Oregon, USA
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Dantzig_George.html
    George Dantzig
    Born: 8 Nov 1914 in Portland, Oregon, USA
    Click the picture above
    to see two larger pictures Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
    George Dantzig studied mathematics at the University of Maryland, receiving his A.B. in 1936. The following year he received an M.A. in mathematics from the University of Michigan. Dantzig worked as a Junior Statistician in the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics from 1937 to 1939, then, from 1941 to 1946, he was head of the Combat Analysis Branch, U.S.A.F. Headquarters Statistical Control. He received his doctorate in mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1946. In that year he was appointed Mathematical Advisor for USAF Headquarters. In 1947 Dantzig made the contribution to mathematics for which he is most famous, the simplex method of optimisation. It grew out of his work with the U.S. Air Force where he become an expert on planning methods solved with desk calculators. In fact this was known as "programming", a military term that, at that time, referred to plans or schedules for training, logistical supply or deployment of men. Dantzig mechanised the planning process by introducing "linear programming", where "programming" has the military meaning explained above. The importance of linear programming methods was described, in 1980, by Laszlo Lovasz who wrote:-

    13. D Index
    Translate this page 191*) D'Ovidio, Enrico (414*) da Vinci, Leonardo (704*) Dandelin, Germinal (392*)Danti, Egnatio (1869*) dantzig, David van (518) dantzig, george (501*) Darboux
    http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Indexes/D.html
    Names beginning with D
    The number of words in the biography is given in brackets. A * indicates that there is a portrait. d'Alembert , Jean (2501*)
    D'Arcy Thompson
    W (479*)
    d'Oresme
    , Nicole (191*)
    D'Ovidio
    , Enrico (414*)
    da Vinci
    , Leonardo (704*)
    Dandelin
    , Germinal (392*)
    Danti
    , Egnatio (1869*)
    Dantzig, David
    van (518)
    Dantzig, George

    Darboux
    , Gaston (814*)
    Darwin
    , George (167*) Dase , Zacharias (125) Daubechies , Ingrid (1728*) Davenport , Harold (700*) Davidov , August (435*) Davies , Evan Tom (299*) de Beaune , Florimond (316) de Bessy , Bernard (411) de Billy , Jacques (150) de Boislaurent , Budan (171) de Bougainville , Louis (1054*) de Broglie , Louis duc (488*) de Carcavi , Pierre (439) de Coriolis , Gustave (805*) de Coulomb , Charles (2025*) de Fermat , Pierre (2491*) de Fontenelle , Bernard (255*) de Groot , Johannes (444*) , Ernest (239) , Guillaume (204*) de La Condamine , Charles (480*) della Faille , Jan-Karel (233*) de La Hire , Philippe (297) de La Roche , Estienne (275) de Lagny , Thomas (186*) de Moivre , Abraham (379*) , Joseph (216) de Montmort , Pierre (300) De Morgan , Augustus (856*) de Prony , Gaspard (1015*) de Ortega , Juan (157) de Rham , Georges (741*) de Roberval , Gilles (349) de St-Venant de Sitter , Willem (483*) de Sluze de Tilly , Joseph (179) de Tinseau , D'Amondans (144) de Witt , Johan (412*) de Wronski , Josef (324*) Dechales , Claude (175) Dedekind , Richard (2081*) Dee , John (2364*) Dehn , Max (691*) del Ferro , Scipione (1407) Delamain , Richard (393) Delambre , Jean Baptiste (213*) Delaunay , Charles (172*) Deligne , Pierre (362*) Della Porta , Giambattista (409*)

    14. Dantzig, George Bernard
    dantzig, george Bernard (1914 ). US mathematician, an expert in linearcomputer programming and operations research. His work is
    http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/D/Dantzig/1.html
    Dantzig, George Bernard
    US mathematician, an expert in linear computer programming and operations research. His work is fundamental to many university courses in business studies, industrial engineering, and managerial sciences. Dantzig has been involved in all the main areas of mathematical programming.
    Dantzig was born in Portland, Oregon, and educated at the universities of Maryland and Michigan. During World War II he became attached to the Statistical Control Headquarters of the US Air Force. He was a research mathematician with the Rand Corporation at Santa Monica, California, 1952-60, and then became a professor at the University of California at Berkeley, moving 1966 to Stanford University, Palo Alto, California.
    A fundamental problem in economics is the optimum allocation of scarce resources among competing activities - a problem that can be expressed in mathematical form. In 1947 Dantzig discovered that many such planning problems could be formulated as linear computer programs. He also devised an algorithm, known as the simplex method, which was widely adopted for the purpose.

    15. Mathematicians
    Translate this page Darboux, Jean Gaston dantzig, george Bernard De Morgan, Augustus Dedekind, (JuliusWilhelm) Richard Dee, John, Dehn, Max Descartes, René Dickson, Leonard
    http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/Categories/Scientists/Mathematic
    Darboux, Jean Gaston
    Dantzig, George Bernard

    De Morgan, Augustus

    Dedekind, (Julius Wilhelm) Richard
    Darboux, Jean Gaston
    Dantzig, George Bernard

    De Morgan, Augustus

    Dedekind, (Julius Wilhelm) Richard
    ...
    Dirichlet, (Peter Gustav) Lejeune

    16. 1996 George B. Dantzig Dissertation Award
    1997 george B. dantzig Dissertation Award The george B. dantzig Dissertation Award Committee is now accepting entries for the 1997 award.
    http://www.iems.nwu.edu/~levi/dantzig.html
    1997 George B. Dantzig Dissertation Award
    The George B. Dantzig Dissertation Award Committee is now accepting entries for the 1997 award. The award for the best OR/MS dissertation serves to promote greater interaction between academia and industry by encouraging researchers to conduct innovative research that is relevant to practice in any area of operations research and management science. The first and second place winners will receive awards of $800 and $400 respectively. Additional finalists will receive honorable mentions with $100 awards. Prizes will be awarded at the INFORMS National Fall Meeting in Dallas, Texas Oct. 26-29, 1997. Each entry must: 1) Consist of a doctoral dissertation written primarily by the entrant and completed between Jan. 1, 1996, and July 1, 1997. 2) Present original ideas obtained predominantly by the entrant. 3) Clearly illustrate and demonstrate the relevance of the work in practice and the potential impact in industry. Entrants should submit six copies of the following items before July 15, 1997: 1) A summary of the dissertation (less than 5 double-spaced pages) highlighting the significance of the problem, the novelty of the methodology approach, the contribution of the research to industry, and the scope of the dissertation.

    17. References For Dantzig_George
    References for the biography of george dantzig References for george dantzig. Articles Professor george dantzig Linear Programming Founder Turns 80, SIAM News
    http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Dantzig_George.html
    References for George Dantzig
    Articles:
  • Professor George Dantzig: Linear Programming Founder Turns 80, SIAM News (November 1994). Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
    History Topics
    ... Anniversaries for the year
    JOC/EFR December 1996 School of Mathematics and Statistics
    University of St Andrews, Scotland
    The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/References/Dantzig_George.html
  • 18. Dantzig_George Portraits
    Portraits of george dantzig george dantzig. JOC/EFR August 2001
    http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/PictDisplay/Dantzig_George.html
    George Dantzig
    JOC/EFR August 2001 The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/PictDisplay/Dantzig_George.html

    19. INFORMS: George B. Dantzig Dissertation Award
    george B. dantzig Dissertation Award. Who is george B. dantzig? george dantzigreceived his doctorate in mathematics from Berkeley in 1946.
    http://www.informs.org/Prizes/whoisDantzig.html
    Go to INFORMS Page ... INFORMS Home What's New Info for Members Info for Nonmembers Conferences Continuing Education Education/Students Employment Prizes Publications Subdivisions Searchable Databases Links About this Web Site INFORMS Online Bookstore Discussion Search
    George B. Dantzig
    Dissertation Award
    Who is George B. Dantzig?
    George Dantzig received his doctorate in mathematics from Berkeley in 1946. He worked for the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, served as Chief of the Combat Analysis Branch for USAF Headquarters Statistical Control and as Mathematical Advisor for USAF Headquarters, Research Mathematician for RAND Corporation, and Professor of Operations Research and Chairman of the Operations Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley. He is currently Professor of Operations Research and Computer Science, Co-Director of the Systems Optimization Laboratory, and Director of the PILOT Energy-Economic Model Project. A member of the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Science, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and recipient of the National Medal of Science, plus eight honorary degrees, Professor Dantzig's seminal work has laid the foundation for much of the field of systems engineering and is widely used in network design and component design in computer, mechanical, and electrical engineering.

    20. 1996 George B. Dantzig Dissertation Award
    1997 george B. dantzig Dissertation Award. The george B. dantzig DissertationAward Committee is now accepting entries for the 1997 award.
    http://primal.iems.nwu.edu/~levi/dantzig.html
    1997 George B. Dantzig Dissertation Award
    The George B. Dantzig Dissertation Award Committee is now accepting entries for the 1997 award. The award for the best OR/MS dissertation serves to promote greater interaction between academia and industry by encouraging researchers to conduct innovative research that is relevant to practice in any area of operations research and management science. The first and second place winners will receive awards of $800 and $400 respectively. Additional finalists will receive honorable mentions with $100 awards. Prizes will be awarded at the INFORMS National Fall Meeting in Dallas, Texas Oct. 26-29, 1997. Each entry must: 1) Consist of a doctoral dissertation written primarily by the entrant and completed between Jan. 1, 1996, and July 1, 1997. 2) Present original ideas obtained predominantly by the entrant. 3) Clearly illustrate and demonstrate the relevance of the work in practice and the potential impact in industry. Entrants should submit six copies of the following items before July 15, 1997: 1) A summary of the dissertation (less than 5 double-spaced pages) highlighting the significance of the problem, the novelty of the methodology approach, the contribution of the research to industry, and the scope of the dissertation.

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