Professor Anthony John Grenville Hey Commander of the Order of the British Empire FREng FIET Fellow of the Institute of Physics FBCS was Vice President of Microsoft Research Connections, a division of Microsoft Research, until his departure in 2014.
Education
Hey was educated at King Edward"s School, Birmingham and the University of Oxford. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in physics in 1967, and a Doctor of Philosophy in theoretical physics in 1970, from, Oxford and Street John"s College, Oxford.
Career
From 1970 through 1972 Hey was a postdoctoral fellow at California Institute of Technology (Caltech). He then moved to Geneva, Switzerland and worked as a fellow at European Organization of Nuclear Research (the European organization for nuclear research) for two years. Hey worked about thirty years as an academic at University of Southampton, starting in 1974 as a particle physicist.
He spent 1978 as a visiting fellow at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Foreign 1981 he returned to Caltech as a visiting research professor There he learned of Carver Mead"s work on very-large-scale integration and become interested in applying parallel computing techniques to large-scale scientific simulations.
Hey worked with British semiconductor company Inmos on the Transputer project in the 1980s. He switched to computer science in 1985, and in 1986 became professor of computation in the Department of Electronics and Computer Science at Southampton.
While there, he was promoted to Head of the School of Electronics and Computer Science in 1994 and Dean of Engineering and Applied Science in 1999.
Among his work was "doing research on Unix with tools like LaTeX." In 1990 he was a visiting fellow at the Thomas J. Watson Research Center of International Business Machines Corporation Research. He then worked with Jack Dongarra, Rolf Hempel and David Walker, to define the Message Passing Interface (Max Planck Institute) which became a de facto open standard for parallel scientific computing. In 1998 he was a visiting research fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory in the United States of America. Hey led the United Kingdom"s e-Science Programme from March 2001 to June 2005.
He was appointed corporate vice-president of technical computing at Microsoft on 27 June 2005.
Later he became corporate vice president of external research, and in 2011 corporate vice president of Microsoft Research Connections until his departure in 2014. Hey is the editor of the journal Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience.
Membership
Among other scientific advisory boards in Europe and the United States, he is a member of the Global Grid Forum Advisory Committee.