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Google mentor Rajeev Motwani dies
By   siliconindia news bureau
Sunday,07 June 2009, 19:09 hrs
 
Washington: Rajeev Motwani, the Indian-American computer science professor at Stanford University who mentored Google's co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin when they were graduate students, has died in a swimming pool accident at his Atherton, California home. He drowned Friday morning in a backyard swimming pool at the home, said the San Jose Mercury News. Though paramedics were called when his body was found, and he was pronounced dead at the scene at 12.28 p.m.



Born March 26, 1962, in Jammu, Motwani grew up in New Delhi, earned a computer science degree from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kanpur in 1983, and his doctorate from the University of California-Berkeley in 1988. As a Stanford professor, he also served as the director of graduate studies for the computer science department and founded the Mining Data at Stanford project (MIDAS).

Motwani was well known for his research in theoretical computer science and was a winner of the Godel Prize in 2001 for his work on the PCP theorem and its applications to hardness of approximation. His work had a major impact on the field of algorithms, and he used his knowledge of that field to develop methods for searching almost infinite archives of data by randomly selecting subsets of the data. It was in the field of data mining that he made some of his seminal contributions. The field is the basis of much of modern Internet commerce and the operation of search engines such as Google.

Motwani co-authored two widely-used theoretical computer science textbooks, Randomized Algorithms with Prabhakar Raghavan (Cambridge University Press 1995, ISBN 978-0521474658) and Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation with John Hopcroft and Jeffrey Ullman (2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 2000).

Motwani helped many Valley startups gain a foothold, but none so famous as Google, whose cofounder Sergey Brin mourned him Saturday. "I want him to really be remembered well. It's a rare combination to have somebody who is so smart and also such a nice guy," Brin told Mercury News on the phone.

Motwani, he added, "had a lot of interest in computer science theory. He's primarily a theoretician, and it's incredible the amount of impact he has had directly on products and companies."

The news of Motwani's death struck like a thunderclap in Silicon Valley. Blogs, Facebook pages and Twitter communications were filled with testimonials to a brilliant, kind man who was never too busy to help a budding entrepreneur or struggling graduate student.

Motwani is survived by his wife Asha Jadeja and daughters Naitri and Anya. The family will hold a private funeral, according to the university's news agency, but a memorial service will be held at a later date.

     
   
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Reader's comments(25)
1: Please look beyond your own benefits and respect the intellect regardless of which country or nation. World is flat.
Posted by: Rekha - 09 Jun, 2009
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2: facts are sacred and comments are free. so every individual has right to comment. Ignore if you dont like.
Posted by: pragya Gupta - 09 Jun, 2009
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3: I have not seen him help deserved entrepreneurs - built his own cigar club and stayed within. People including me come and go - nothing more to say.
Posted by: Anton - 08 Jun, 2009
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4: Look not how bad you talk about others, look how good others talk about you. Joy Leo
Posted by: Joy Leo - 08 Jun, 2009
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5: motwani.if done india proud by staying in india helping indians ,i would have felt sorry,no need you have enjoyed good bye ,what you sow you reap,
and brothers indian no need to say sorry nor bury him in India nor his family
no
Posted by: hydri - 08 Jun, 2009
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6:I support u. No loss for India in any way. All the loss happened at 1983.
 Smani replied to: hydri 
 post - 08 Jun, 2009
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7: Can comments from such people be deleted please. They are mere croakings of frogs in their wells who don't see beyond the so called 'boundaries' of a country, to value the contributions of a man. He was a teacher and he taught, it does not matter who he taught. He spread knowledge, that was his achievement. I feel sorry for you 'hydri,' wish you had someone to teach you some values, leave alone better language skills.
 DeepBlue replied to:  Smani 
 post - 08 Jun, 2009
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8: Just shut off DeepBlue. What you guys done after being used Indian Tax Payers money. Nothing. so Motwani too... Can't he find any candidate find in india out of 100cr population fo mentoring. Just shut off your smelly mouth. write off man. There are many thankless folks who settled in US and did nothing to the country which brought themup
 bwc  replied to: DeepBlue 
 post - 18 Jun, 2009
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9: I agree with U wat u've said... Who moulds u up after ur parents? If U r left laawaris, they take care as their own children. If U experience this U'll know what I'm expressing. Education given to anyone be Indian,American, Hindu, Muslim, sikh but they are humans is priceless and worthiest. India lost a person or not but the world has lost a talented, humble, gentleman. There is an old Tamil song of actor Late.Chandrabaabu "Buddhiyulla manidharellam vetri kaanbadhillai, vetri petra manidhar yellam buddhisaali illai - Talented men do not find success and successful men are not brilliants, but this man has prooved that theory wrong. Richest wealth of the world is education - those who utilise it are the luckiest, from where ever u get and to whom ever u give.
 Thanveer  replied to: DeepBlue 
 post - 08 Jun, 2009
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10: It is a big loss for IT industry. Great man of good innovation kept the Indian Flag flying with all the giants in the US. May his soul rest in peace.
Posted by: N. Venuprasat - 08 Jun, 2009
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11: It is a sad news both for India and world. May his soul rest in peace. May god bless the family for this unbearable loss.
Posted by: SANDEEP - 08 Jun, 2009
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12: It is very sad. One of my colleage had also passed away in the same way in swimming pool at Seattle during end of May last year. I can understand the sorrow the whole family will be undergoing. In fact I was one of the person who had to carry such a message to his family at Chennai, India.
I sincerely pray god that his soul may rest in piece.
Posted by: S A Sornamani - 08 Jun, 2009
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13:A very sad coincidence, two died in the same way.
Are there any indications of foul play?
 jean lenard replied to: S A Sornamani 
 post - 08 Jun, 2009
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14: Yup there is a co - incidence u better find it out , atleast u will hve sme better work to do......
 Nins replied to:  jean lenard 
 post - 09 Jun, 2009
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15: It is a great loss to India and computer science students and may his soul rest in peace
Posted by: Abeish Babu - 08 Jun, 2009
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16: young man so good and brilliant, the world lost him. It is said that God takes away people ,who are near and dear to him soon. i never met him but read of him now,yet feel attached.
Posted by: Subramanya - 08 Jun, 2009
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17: It is truly a great loss to all of us..........may his soul rest in peace
Posted by: Pavana Lingaiah - 08 Jun, 2009
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18:It is veery veery loss for the lover of computer.
 KARTAR SINGH replied to: Pavana Lingaiah 
 post - 10 Jun, 2009
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19: a great lose.
a brilliant guy,sure he was.
my prayers for him.
Posted by: Devadath.C.M - 08 Jun, 2009
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20: We india lost a gr8 scientist and a mentor... So sad to hear...
Posted by: Haseeb - 08 Jun, 2009
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21: Unbelievable. World has lost an icon / jewel.
Posted by: Dinesh - 07 Jun, 2009
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22: The world lost a beautiful mind
Posted by: satya - 07 Jun, 2009
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23: world lost a brilliant mind and wonderful human being...
Posted by: K Madhav - 07 Jun, 2009
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24: Sad to Hear... we lost one Mentor
Posted by: var - 07 Jun, 2009
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25: it is undoubtedly very sad.
Posted by: hitesh - 07 Jun, 2009
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