• Comment: 13 out of the 24 sources are patents. WP:PATENTS indicates that while they can be used to show that a patent exists, they're mere presence is not quite enough to prove invention. It would be far better if you can find a source that states this.
    As per WP:PROF the scholar link on google scholar could be useful for citation metrics, especially for an academic in computer science field. However, Web of Science only indicate three citations; most of these citations are from one patent to another, so Google Scholar is highly misleading with regards to a citation count. (Patents are basically self-published, with the government office giving somewhat minimal overview of the content).
    Please find more sourcing that is either secondary to the patent (there is an article or news piece noting that Dr. Sinha has significant patents of use), or additional information. Bluethricecreamman (talk) 03:08, 16 July 2024 (UTC)
  • Comment: The referencing method used in this draft is based on examples, however, footnotes should refer to reliable sources to establish verifiability. It makes no sense to cite 10 sources in the lead section and REFBOMB the claim "[Sinha has made] notable contributions" if none of the cited sources discusses whether or not his contributions are notable. A very good example for the problem with this draft's referencing situation is footnote 10: It refers to Cision PR Web, which is a press release platform. The source does not even mention the subject. And it doesn't make any claims about any invention's notability. Best, --Johannes (Talk) (Contribs) (Articles) 09:01, 7 July 2024 (UTC)


Suyash Sinha is an Indian American computer scientist, engineer, scholar.[1], inventor[2][3] and entrepreneur[4] with notable contributions[5][6][7][8] to the field of computer science. His work has been cited over thousand times[1]

Inventor

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As an inventor, Suyash has been granted patents across a broad spectrum of core computer science technology areas:

Microsoft Hypervisor and X86 Virtualization

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Suyash led the engineering and development for Microsoft Hyper-V hypervisor's v1 release from Microsoft Corporation's HQ in Redmond, WA. The hypervisor leverage the microprocessor-level virtualization extensions in Intel and AMD processor architectures (x86 virtualization). The release of the Microsoft hypervisor was instrumental in building the virtualization capability in Windows Server positioning the company as one of top three hypervisor providers in the world alongside Linux KVM and VMWare ESX. The hypervisor is also a critical component of Microsoft Azure cloud.

Microsoft Windows Kernel and Operating System

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Suyash was the first person of Indian origin selected to lead the Microsoft Windows core kernel team after the success of Microsoft Hypervisor launch. During his leadership, several fundamental improvements (like MinWin) were made to the Windows Kernel leading to highly successful Windows 7, Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2012 R2 product launches which shared this common kernel.

Windows Application Platform

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Suyash led the engineering for Windows Application Platform which led to a new way of building Windows applications using open web technologies like HTML and Javascript opening the door for millions of web developers to create native applications. Such applications would co-exist alongside traditional Win32/WoW64 applications while ensuring compatibility. The launch of this new application platform was completed in Windows 8.

Computer Science Research

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Suyash served as a Director in eXtreme Computing Group (XCG) at Microsoft Research alongside other renowned computer scientists like Dan Reed, Dennis Gannon and Rick Rashid.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Suyash Sinha". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 2024-07-06.
  2. ^ "Suyash Sinha Inventions, Patents and Patent Applications - Justia Patents Search". patents.justia.com. Retrieved 2024-07-06.
  3. ^ "dblp: Suyash Sinha". dblp.org. Retrieved 2024-07-06.
  4. ^ staff, CNBC com (2017-02-28). "Upstart 25: Midfin Systems". www.cnbc.com. Retrieved 2024-07-06.
  5. ^ "dblp: Direct Network Prototype Leveraging Light Peak Technology". dblp.org. Retrieved 2024-07-06.
  6. ^ Lakafosis, Vasileios; Addagatla, Sreenivas; Belady, Christian; Sinha, Suyash (2012). "Prometheus: A Wirelessly Interconnected, Pico-Datacenter Framework for the Developing World". In Koucheryavy, Yevgeni; Mamatas, Lefteris; Matta, Ibrahim; Tsaoussidis, Vassilis (eds.). Wired/Wireless Internet Communication. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 7277. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer. pp. 26–39. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-30630-3_3. ISBN 978-3-642-30630-3.
  7. ^ a b "‪Direct network prototype leveraging light peak technology‬". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 2024-07-07.
  8. ^ Koucheryavy, Yevgeni; Mamatas, Lefteris; Matta, Ibrahim; Tsaoussidis, Vassilis (2012-05-17). Wired / Wireless Internet Communication: 10th International Conference, WWIC 2012, Santorini, Greece, June 6-8, 2012, Proceedings. Springer. ISBN 978-3-642-30630-3.
  9. ^ a b c Traut, Eric; Foltz, Forrest; Thornton, Andrew; Sinha, Suyash (2013-02-19), Protection agents and privilege modes, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  10. ^ Sinha, Suyash; Jayamohan, Ajith (2015-02-17), Template virtual machines, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  11. ^ a b Field, Scott A.; Baker, Brandon; Traut, Eric; Sinha, Suyash; Ganguly, Joy; Foltz, Forrest; Cutler, David (2010-07-27), Protecting operating-system resources, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  12. ^ Sinha, Suyash; Jayamohan, Ajith (2012-02-23), Hierarchical memory management in virtualized systems for non-volatile memory models, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  13. ^ Traut, Eric P.; Havens, Darryl E.; Bernabeu-Auban, Jose Manuel; Brown, Mark R.; Ward, Richard B.; Sinha, Suyash; Erdogan, Tahsin; Stritzel, Adam D.; Canter, Adriaan W. (2013-07-23), Catalog-based software component management, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  14. ^ US8627284B2, Stritzel, Adam D.; Canter, Adriaan W. & Traut, Eric P. et al., "Managed system extensibility", issued 2014-01-07 
  15. ^ Meshchaninov, Dmitry; Bradshaw, Dexter Paul; Sinha, Suyash (2016-08-02), Storage device access using unprivileged software code, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  16. ^ a b Sinha, Suyash (2012-03-27), Updating software while it is running, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  17. ^ a b Sinha, Suyash; Addagatla, Sreenivas (2011-10-20), Application sla based dynamic, elastic, and adaptive provisioning of network capacity, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  18. ^ Sinha, Suyash (2013-10-15), Location control service, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  19. ^ US7055742B2, Sinha, Suyash, "Method for secure on-line voting", issued 2006-06-06 
  20. ^ Sinha, Suyash; Ganguly, Shuvabrata; Jayamohan, Ajith (2015-11-05), Constructing and operating high-performance unified compute infrastructure across geo-distributed datacenters, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  21. ^ Hays, Boyd Leon; Fathalla, Mohamed E.; Williams, Charles Joseph; Sinha, Suyash (2016-08-30), Elastic management framework, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  22. ^ Sinha, Suyash; Addagatla, Sreenivas; Belady, Christian L.; Williams, Charles Joseph; Harris, Shaun L.; Peterson, Eric C. (2015-07-28), Wireless cloud-based computing for rural and developing areas, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  23. ^ Pakhunov, Alexey; Jayamohan, Ajith; Sinha, Suyash (2015-02-24), Message passing in a cluster-on-chip computing environment, Google Patents, retrieved 2024-07-07
  24. ^ US20120324068A1, Jayamohan, Ajith; Sinha, Suyash & Addagatla, Sreenivas et al., "Direct networking for multi-server units", issued 2012-12-20