Welcome to Bruce Donald's homepage.
I am a Professor of Computer Science at Duke University and
Professor of
Biochemistry in the Duke
University Medical Center.
My
laboratory is part
of the
We are grateful to our funders
for their support.
You can browse my
books and
papers, learn about research
in my laboratory, or
take my (not entirely?)
Random Walk:
1976-1980 Yale, B.A.
1980-1984 Harvard, GSD
1982-1987 MIT,
Ph.D. in Computer Science
  1987-1998 Cornell Computer Science Department, Professor
1994-1996 Stanford University, Sabbatical
1995-1997 Interval Research Corporation
1997-2006 Dartmouth, Professor
2006-now Duke, Professor.
Feel free to check out classes I teach, and
my lab in the news.
Here are tips on using LaTeX for NIH grant applications, and
seminars of
interest for lab members.
Our lab has a YouTube channel.
I have a bit of fun stuff:
you can check out
my band, more music (MP3s), MEMS
movies, robot
movies, and other
hacks.
If you are interested in joining my laboratory,
please read my brief FAQ.
Contact:
Bruce R. Donald
Professor of Computer Science
Professor of Biochemistry, Duke University Medical Center
P.O. Box 90129
Department of Computer Science
D101 Levine
Science Research Center (LSRC)
Research Drive
Duke University
Durham, NC 27708-0129 USA
Please do not send me email as quoted-printable or in HTML or
base64. Just plain ASCII text. I use a text-only mail program since
the graphical ones are too slow. When you get many emails a day, a
couple of seconds per message matters.
Please do not publish my e-mail address on any website or mailing
list or book (yes, people have actually published books that are lists
of scientists' email addresses). It will cause me to receive spam,
since the address can be harvested by advertisers.
Phone: 919-660-6583
Office: D212 Levine
Science Research Center (LSRC)
Please note that our lab has moved to great new space:
Dry-Lab: D240 LSRC,
660-4017
Wet-Lab:
3245,
3246, &
3248
French Family
Science Center, 660-4018
Google
map;
Duke Maps:
LSRC,
French Center
Et cette proposition est généralement vraie en toutes
progressions et en tous nombres premiers; de quoi je vous envoierois
la démonstration, si je n'appréhendois d'être trop long.