Werner Zorn


Werner Zorn is a German computer scientist and Internet pioneer.
From 2001 to 2007, he was a professor of communication systems at the Hasso Plattner Institute at the University of Potsdam, previously working at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology as the head of a computer center and a professor.

Life

Zorn, who was the son of professor, attended primary school in Bad Soden from 1949 to 1953, then the Leibniz Realgymnasium in Frankfurt. After graduating in 1962, he studied at the Technical University of Karlsruhe, specializing in communications engineering and graduated with a degree in engineering in 1967. He then earned his doctorate, with his instructor being Karl Steinbuch, with the thesis Setting method for linear and non-linear classifiers in the field of character recognition.
In 1972, he moved to the newly founded Department of Computer Science of the University of Karlsruhe, where he was responsible for the development, operation and further development of the Informatik-Rechnerabteilung data center for 25 years. After his appointment as a professor in 1979, he chose the topics of methodological performance analysis and data communication as one of his main fields, which he has continued to pursue ever since.
With the first German Internet email in 1984, the connection of China to the international computer networks in 1987, the founding of the company Xlink in 1989 as one of the first German Internet service providers, Zorn set a number of early milestones for the Internet internationally.
In his capacity as Admin-C for the domain "germany" with the e-mail address zorn@germany, Zorn was involved in the establishment of an open network of different computer networks in the German scientific field. He came into conflict with the German Research Network DFN and became the main critic of its funding policy, which was strictly OSI-oriented and against the TCP/IP-based Internet lasting until the 1990s.
After moving to the Hasso Plattner Institute at the University of Potsdam in 2001, Zorn devoted himself to the problem of hierarchically consistent modeling of communication systems in teaching and research, resulting, in particular, in 2007 in a methodologically novel approach to the quantitative analysis of discrete dynamical systems.

Awards (selection)

Musik & Informatik