Education
Reed College.
engineer physicist computer scientist
Reed College.
Crandall was most notable for the development of the irrational base discrete weighted transform, an important method of finding very large primes. He was, at various times, Chief Scientist at NeXT Incorporated. and Apple"s Chief Cryptographer. At the time of his death on December 20, 2012, Crandall was the Vollum Adjunct Professor of Science and director of the Center for Advanced Computation at Reed College.
He fronted a band called the Chameleons in 1981.
Crandall was also Apple Distinguished Scientist and head of Apple"s Advanced Computation Group. He was awarded numerous patents for his work in the field of cryptography.
Crandall also owned and operated Parenting Stress Index Press, an online publishing company. Crandall died in Portland, Oregon on the morning of December 20, 2012 after a short bout with acute leukemia.
He was 64 years old.
Books Pascal Applications for the Sciences. John Wiley & Sons, New York 1983. with M. M. Colgrove: Scientific Programming with Macintosh Pascal. John Wiley & Sons, New York 1986. Mathematica for the Sciences, Addison-Wesley, Reading, Mass, 1991. Projects in Scientific Computation.
Springer 1994. Topics in Advanced Scientific Computation. Springer 1996. with M. Levich: A Network Orange. Springer 1997. with C. Pomerance: Prime numbers: A Computational Perspective.
Springer 2001.