Nearly 6,500 guests and students from the UCLA Henry Samueli
School of Engineering and Applied Science gathered at Pauley Pavilion
in Westwood Saturday, June 17, to hear Internet pioneer and Google
vice president Vinton G. Cerf deliver the 2006 commencement address.
Widely known as a “father of the Internet,” Cerf,
who has led an illustrious career, encouraged graduates to "find
an engineering career that you truly love. Such work can nourish
and sustain in ways that must be experienced to appreciate."
He also shared some very personal advice, telling students not
to be afraid to take on a challenge that might result in failure.
"The challenging, risky road may also be the most productive
and satisfying. If you have a choice, take the riskier one, you
will not regret it for the experience if nothing else," Cerf
advised. "What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger!"
As a humorous aside, Cerf, citing the leaning tower of Pisa in
Italy and a Swedish warship called the VASA, which capsized after
its impressive gunports filled with water, advised the future
engineers of "another important, if perhaps dubious life
lesson. If you are going to screw up in engineering, try to do
it big time. The results will become a tourist attraction in the
centuries to come and therefore contribute to the general economic
welfare of the local population, if not to the reputation of the
engineering profession." Cerf's remarks were met with laughter.
The approximately 1,000 combined undergraduate and graduate students
celebrating graduation then received some final advice for the
future from the nation’s most influential technology pioneers.
On a serious note, Cerf reminded graduates that “with the
occupation of engineer comes a moral responsibility, if not also
a legal one, to do the best you can at the job and to be very
cognizant of the side-effects of your work. People's lives may
depend on it.”
Throughout his career, Cerf has contributed significantly to
the creation and the continued growth of the Internet. Cerf, together
with Robert Kahn, co-designed the basic architecture of the Internet
and the very first TCP/IP protocols. Both were awarded the U.S.
National Medal of Technology in 1997, and in 2005 the pair received
the highest civilian honor bestowed in the United States for their
pioneering work: the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Now a vice president at Google, Cerf continues to identify new
enabling technologies and applications on the Internet and other
platforms for the company, and along with his VP post, holds the
title of “chief Internet evangelist” for the company.
Cerf is himself a graduate of UCLA Engineering, and worked early
in his career with UCLA professor Leonard Kleinrock on the development
of ARPANET, the beginning of what is today's Internet.