Dr. Goldberg was born in
Brooklyn, New York City, in 1944. He received the B.S. degree in mathematics from
MIT in 1965 and the MA and Ph.D. degrees in Applied Mathematics from
Harvard University, in 1969 and 1973, respectively. In his Ph.D. thesis "Architectural Principles for Virtual Computer Systems", published 1974, he invented the classification for
Hypervisors which is now widely adopted in the area of virtual computer systems and computer science in general. In 1974, with Gerald J. Popek, he proposed the Popek and Goldberg virtualization requirements, In 1978, Dr. Goldberg filed a patent under the name "Hardware virtualizer for supporting recursive virtual computer systems on a host computer system" (Patent Nr. 4253145), which was accepted in 1981 and is held by Honeywell Information Systems Inc. In 1975, Dr. Goldberg, together with
Dr. Jeffrey Buzen and Dr. Harold Schwenk (whose last names are represented in the initials of the company), founded a company called "BGS Systems, Inc." in the basement of Buzen's home in
Lexington, MA. Over the next fifteen years, it moved five times, but always within Waltham, MA. The company set out to develop products that provided centralized capacity management and planning capabilities for all major computing platforms. In addition, BGS created products that managed and evaluated computing systems such as
UNIX, MVS, VM, OpenVMS, and the AS/400 as well as
OS/2 and
Windows NT. By the early 1980s, the company would claim over 30,000 installations worldwide with its BEST/1 product. This software, which was based on queuing theory, was devised by the three founders and promoted by the company as being the de facto standard for capacity management and planning in heterogeneous distributed environments. (1998 BGS Systems was acquired by BMC Software, Inc. The transaction was valued at approximately $285 million.)
Death and afterward Goldberg died on 25 February 1994 in
Boston, at the age of 49, after suffering from cancer. ==Published works==