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  1. Mihai Pătrașcu (17 July 1982 – 5 June 2012) was a Romanian-American computer scientist at AT&T Labs in Florham Park, New Jersey, USA. Pătrașcu attended Carol I National College in Craiova. As a high school student, he won 2 gold medals and 1 silver medal at the International Olympiad in Informatics.

  2. 2012. Non-adaptive fault diagnosis for all-optical networks via combinatorial group testing on graphs. NJA Harvey, M Patrascu, Y Wen, S Yekhanin, VWS Chan. IEEE INFOCOM 2007-26th IEEE International Conference on Computer …. , 2007. 168. 2007. Unifying the landscape of cell-probe lower bounds. M P a ˇ traşcu.

  3. Mihai Patrascu is a Senior Member of Technical Staff at AT&T LabsResearch. Mihai obtained a PhD (2008) and B.S. (2006) from MIT. After MIT, he spent a year at IBM Almaden on the Raviv Memorial Fellowship.

  4. Mihai Pătraşcu and Erik Demaine SIAM Journal on Computing (SICOMP), vol. 35(4), 2006. Special issue 36th ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC 2004). This chapter of my PhD thesis contains a better exposition. The conference title was: Lower Bounds for Dynamic Connectivity.

  5. 7 de jun. de 2012 · Mihai Pătraşcu passed away Tuesday after a bout with brain cancer. Even though he hadn't reached his 30th birthday, he had already produced a number of major achievements in the algorithmic community.

  6. Mihai Pătraşcu and Erik Demaine SIAM Journal on Computing (SICOMP), vol. 35(4), 2006. Special issue 36th ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC 2004). This chapter of my PhD thesis contains a better exposition. The conference title was: Lower Bounds for Dynamic Connectivity.

  7. Michael the Brave (Romanian: Mihai Viteazul [miˈhaj viˈte̯azul] or Mihai Bravu; 1558 – 9 August 1601), born as Mihai Pătrașcu, was the Prince of Wallachia (as Michael II, 1593–1601), Prince of Moldavia (1600) and de facto ruler of Transylvania (1599–1600).