Chandra Kintala (1948–2009) was a computer science researcher in New Jersey, United States and Bangalore, India from 2006–2009.
He worked at Bell Labs in AT&T, Lucent and Avaya in New Jersey, where he and David Belanger invented a language and a software tool used in AT&T for data analytics on very large databases.
Labs in Bangalore where he held the position of the Director of System Sciences and Academic Relations in India.
He had published 48 refereed research papers and received 6 US patents and a Smithsonian medal sponsored by Computer World in 1998.
He had been active at academic and industry conferences and associations: Kintala had a heart attack and died on 5 November 2009 at Summit, New Jersey.