Eng
Lim Goh, Ph.D.
Dr. Eng Lim Goh has been with SGI for 15 years, becoming one of the
chief scientists in 1998 and chief technology officer in 2001. His tenure includes work in computer graphics
algorithms and high performance computing (HPC) architectures.
In HPC, he oversees Project Ultraviolet, the goal of which
is to design and build the company's next generation science-driven computer architecture.
He is also the coauthor of SGI's recommendation to the high-end computing
revitalization task force (HECRTF) for federal funding of key corresponding
technologies. This proposal was
reviewed by HECRTF in 2003 and judged to be one of the top submitted papers.
Dr. Goh is known as a proponent of next-generation computer systems
designed specifically for customer applications performance. To this, he advocates computational density
and a balanced multi-paradigm approach, across a globally addressable memory,
to architectural design.
In computer graphics, Dr. Goh's current research interest is in the
relationships between human visual perception and visual computing. He has been awarded two U.S. patents in this
field. He is also leading a small
research effort to investigate application-transparent, massively parallel
advanced rendering.
In 2005, the IDG publication, InfoWorld, named Dr. Goh one of
World's 25 most influential CTOs. He
has also been named in the HPCwire list of "15 People to Watch."
Before joining SGI, Dr. Goh worked for Intergraph Systems, Schlumberger
Wireline Netherlands, and Shell Research U.K. A Shell Cambridge University
Scholar, he completed his Ph.D. research and dissertation on parallel
architectures and computer graphics. He
also holds a first-class honors degree in mechanical engineering from
Birmingham University, U.K.