Patrick J. Miller is a computer scientist and high performance parallel applications developer with a Ph.D. in Computer Science from University of California, Davis, in run-time error detection and correction.
This effort was featured on the front page of the New York Times on February 23, 2004.
[1] In September 2005, he and others at Bryn Mawr recreated a FlashMob Supercomputer to calculate the value of pi to 15,000 digits and performed 15,800 steps to simulate the unfolding of a protein interacting with an anthrax toxin.
[2] More recently he is the author of the popular pyMPI distributed parallel version of the Python programming language.
Miller now works as a software developer for Aurora Innovation in Palo Alto, California.