Summary
Maxime Guillaud is a renowned wireless communications researcher and policy-oriented technologist based in the Greater Lyon Area, France. With over a decade of experience designing physical-layer algorithms for wireless networks, he blends deep theoretical tools—random matrix theory, stochastic geometry, information theory, Bayesian inference, and graph signal processing—with practical signal-processing expertise. He currently serves as a Senior Researcher (Directeur de Recherche) at Inria and an Expert Committee Member at Arcep, while also delivering as a ComSoc Distinguished Lecturer, shaping both research and standards. His career spans leading roles at Huawei, academic positions in Vienna and FTW, and fundamental work at EURECOM and Bell Labs, reflecting a rare mix of industry impact and academic rigor. He holds an engineer’s degree from ENSEA and a PhD from Telecom ParisTech, underscoring his solid foundational training. Based in France, he continually advances cross-disciplinary approaches to wireless systems and publishes patents and papers that push the boundaries of network design.
14 years of coding experience
5 years of employment as a software developer
Engineer's degree, Engineer's degree at Ecole nationale supérieure de l'Electronique et de ses Applications
EURECOM
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Telecommunications, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Telecommunications at Telecom ParisTech