Jeremie Miller

American computer programmer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jeremie Miller (born c. 1975 (1975)) is an American software developer and entrepreneur best known for his role in the development of Jabber and the release of jabberd, an early implementation of an XMPP server, in 1999. His work contributed to the standardization of the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) by the Internet Engineering Task Force in 2004, and variations of XMPP have since been implemented on WhatsApp, Kik Messenger, and Zoom.

Bornc. 1975 (age 5051)[1]
Yearsactive1998–present
Quick facts Born, Occupation ...
Jeremie Miller
Jeremie Miller smiles at the camera while attending the SXSW film festival in Austin, Texas during March 2011.
Jeremie Miller in 2011
Bornc. 1975 (age 5051)[1]
OccupationSoftware developer
Years active1998–present
OrganizationBluesky Social, PBC
Known forInventor of the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol
WorksJabber.org, XMPP, Locker, Telehash
WebsiteGitHub
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In 2007, Miller became the technical lead for Wikia Search, an open-source search engine initiative. He later co-founded Singly, Inc. in 2010, which introduced Telehash and Locker. The company was later acquired by Appcelerator in 2013. Currently, Miller sits on the board of directors for Bluesky, a social media platform.[2]

Biography

Miller is from Cascade, Iowa, and lives in Denver, Colorado.[citation needed]

Miller began developing software on his farm in Iowa. He attended Iowa State University where he studied computer and electrical design. He broke off his studies early in 1995 to join an Internet startup company.[which?][citation needed]

He began working on Jabber in 1998, and later released jabberd, the first implementation of an XMPP server, on January 4, 1999.[3][4][5] He also wrote one of the first XML parsers in JavaScript.[4] The release of jabberd 1.0 in May 2000, including protocols for real-time XML streaming by Jeremie Miller and the open-source community, were the basis for XMPP when it was standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force in RFC 3920 and RFC 3921 during October 2004.[3][4][6] Variations of XMPP based on Miller's work have since been adopted by WhatsApp, Kik Messenger, and Zoom (software).[7]

In May 2007, he was hired at Wikia to be technical lead for a project to create an open search engine called Wikia Search.[8] Miller co-founded a company called Singly in 2010, which announced the Locker Project in 2011 and TeleHash projects.[citation needed]

Singly was acquired by Appcelerator in August 2013 on undisclosed terms.[9]

References

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