STEM Squared Summit Guest Innovator

SPEAKER: James “Jim” Starkey

Database architect Jim Starkey, an innovator who was working in computer science right at the cusp of the adoption of the Internet, spoke at the STEM² Summit about pioneering special database technology through InterBase, lessons he learned along the way, and how educators can prepare their students for the next tech disruption.

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Founder and Strategic Advisor at NuoDB

About James “Jim” Starkey

Jim Starkey grew up in River Forest, Illinois where he began programming in high school through project with Illinois Institute of Technology. He earned a degree in Mathematics from the University of Wisconsin with highest honors.

His forty-year career in software engineering has focused on the intersection of networks, databases, and data access languages. He specializes in discovering the flaws in conventional wisdom.

In 1977, he created Datatrieve, demonstrating that the I.T. department need not have a monopoly on creating applications that store, analyze, and report on data. His work in databases showed that relational systems are not inherently slow and that data consistency does not require readers and writers to block each other's work.

More recently, he invented a new programming model for applications running on dozens of cooperating computers and built a distributed relational database on that model which is consistent, partition resistant, and available. Mr. Starkey holds several related patents.

The attitudes that you inspire in your kids are going to be with them forever. If you teach them to adapt and to look beyond what everybody knows, then you have a kid who has the potential to do something major.

— James “Jim” Starkey