Rebecca graduated from Boston University's College
of Arts and Sciences, with a Bachelors degree in Computer Science in May
1991, largely focusing in her studies on computing systems and network
design. She joined Microsoft in June 1991 as a developer in the Excel
team, and has since established herself as one of the most capable
technical leads at Microsoft, often assigned to some of the company's
most critical development projects. After spending over five years as a
developer with various MS Office teams, she took on the program
management of the Windows Operating System OLE group, with a mandate to
"fix OLE". From there, she assumed various critical program and group
management roles with various Windows teams, working on various
technologies, including COM, DCOM, COM+, Trident, IE, and Avalon. In
September of 2003, Rebecca was asked to leave her position as Group
Manager of Avalon to manage the development of the much-anticipated (and
at the time badly-needed) Windows XP SP2 security-focused release,
scheduled less than a year later. Her primary objective was to make
aggressive, end-to-end changes to the operating system that provided
shield-like security technologies for Windows, while still making XP an
attractive operating systems for consumers and business customers alike
in terms of functionality, and ship it in a timely manner. Following the
successful, highly acclaimed release of XP SP2, on schedule in August
2004, Rebecca spent two years as a General Manager in the Windows Vista
Security team responsible for the Firewall, NAP infrastructure, Windows
Security Center, and Anti-Malware functionalities, intended to make
security a more integral and approachable part of using a computer.
Given Rebecca's unique perspective and experience with a wide set of
Microsoft teams and technologies, she was chosen as the Technical
Strategist for Ray Ozzie, who succeeded Bill Gates as Microsoft's Chief
Software Architect in June 2006. In that role, Rebecca's primary goal is
to help drive the Software and Services vision across Microsoft -- a
goal befitting her passion of "changing the world for the better through
software and technology."
In addition to her impressive professional career,
Rebecca is also quite active on a number of other fronts, most notably
in efforts aiming to advance K-12 mathematics and science education, and
to address issues related to the severe under-representation of women in
Computer Science. Examples of her contributions in that capacity include
her service on the Board of Advisors for The Anita Borg Institute for
Women and Technology, and her frequent appearances as a speaker and
panelist at various venues on that subject, including the Grace Hopper
Women in Computing conference. As Chair of the Department from 2000 to
2007, I can also comment on Rebecca's constant interest in keeping up
with the Department's news, and her keen interest in its successes,
often inquiring about its faculty development, and always finding time
in her busy schedule to meet with me, every time I visited the
Northwest. Rebecca visited our department twice over the last five
years, and in both times she made a point of meeting with various
members of the CS faculty and the BU administration, and of addressing
our Women in Computer Science (WICS) group.
In her spare time, Rebecca works, trains,
snowboards, teaches snowboarding in the winter, participates in
triathlons in the summer, hacks around in the garden, hangs out with
friends -- if not in person, then on Facebook -- and otherwise stirs up
trouble with her spouse, J Allard, whom she met in her first year at
Boston University.