- Eric Schmidt
Eric Emerson Schmidt, Ph.D (b. 1955 in Washington, D.C.) is Chairman and CEO of Google Inc and a member of the Board of Directors of Apple Inc. He also sits on the Princeton University Board of Trustees. He lives in Atherton, California with his wife Wendy.
- Vint Cerf
Vinton Gray Cerf (born June 23, 1943) (last name pronounced just like the English word "surf") is an American computer scientist who is commonly referred to as one of the "founding fathers of the Internet" for his key technical and managerial role, together with Bob Kahn, in the creation of the Internet and the TCP/IP protocols which it uses. He was also a co-founder (in 1992) of the Internet Society (ISOC), …
- Vanessa Fox
Vanessa Fox (born 1972) is the founder and product manager of Google Webmaster Central, as of 2007, and is a well-known blogger and public speaker. At conferences and on the Google Webmaster Central blog, Fox offers advice to webmasters to help get their sites listed in Google, and to solve problems they may have with the way Google indexes their pages. On June 14, 2007, Fox announced she would be leaving Google to join Zillow, an online real estate service company.
- Adam Bosworth
Adam Bosworth is a Vice President of Engineering at Google Inc. but in the past has had senior positions at BEA Systems, Microsoft and Borland, as well as within companies which he co-founded. He is considered one of the pioneers of XML technology.,
- Guido van Rossum
Guido van Rossum is a Dutch computer programmer who is best known as the author of the Python programming language. In the Python community, Van Rossum is known as a "Benevolent Dictator for Life", meaning that he continues to oversee the Python development process, making decisions where necessary.
- Chris Dibona
Chris DiBona Open Source Programs Manager at Google
- Chad Hurley
Chad Meredith Hurley (born 1977) is the co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of the popular San Bruno, California-based video sharing website YouTube, one of the biggest providers of videos on the Internet. In June 2006, he was voted 28th on Business 2.0's "50 people who matter" list. In October 2006 he sold YouTube for $1.65 billion to Google. According to an October 10 2006 "Wall Street Journal" article, …
- Udi Manber
Udi Manber , Vice President, Engineering
- Peter Norvig
Peter Norvig is an American computer scientist. He is currently the Director of Research (formerly Director of Search Quality) at Google Inc.. He is a Fellow and Councilor of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence and co-author, with Stuart Russell, of "Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach", now the standard college text.
- Mark Lucovsky
Mark Lucovsky is an American software developer who worked for Microsoft and who is now employed by Google. He is noted for being a part of the team that designed and built the Windows NT operating system. Lucovsky received his bachelor's degree in computer science in 1983 from the California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo. He worked at Digital Equipment Corporation, where he came to the attention of Dave Cutler and Lou Perazzoli.
- John Hanke
John Hanke is the founder and CEO of Keyhole, Inc., which was acquired by Google in 2004 and whose flagship product was renamed to Google Earth. Hanke is currently the director of Google Earth & Google Maps. Hanke received his bachelor's degree (Plan II Honors) from the University of Texas, Austin and his MBA from the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley in 1996.
- Larry Brilliant
Dr. Lawrence (Larry) Brilliant is a medical doctor, epidemiologist, technologist, author and philanthropist. Born in Detroit, Michigan (May 5, 1944), he received his undergraduate training as well as his MPH (Masters in Public Health) from the University of Michigan and his M.D. from Wayne State University. He moved to California for his internship at the Pacific Medical Center, and developed thyroid cancer from which he recovered.
- Hal Varian
Hal Ronald Varian is a central academic in the economics of information technology and the information economy. Varian's assertion that "Technology changes. Economic laws do not." introduces a series of efforts in applying general economic principles to the information economy. As a professor and former dean at the University of California, Berkeley School of Information, the author of many books and papers, a New York Times columnist, and a consultant to Google, Inc, …
- Mike Pinkerton
Mike "Pink" Pinkerton is an American software developer who is known for his work on the Mozilla browsers. He lectures on "Development of Open Source Software" at George Washington University. Pinkerton started working at Netscape Communications in June 1997 where he worked on the Netscape Navigator and then Mozilla browsers. While at Netscape he started development of the Camino (then Chimera) web browser with Dave Hyatt.
- Ken Thompson
Kenneth Lane Thompson (born February 4 1943), commonly referred to as Ken Thompson (or simply Ken in hacker circles), is an American pioneer of computer science notable for his work with the B programming language and his shepherding the UNIX and Plan 9 from Bell Labs operating systems.
- Wayne Rosing
Wayne Rosing has been involved as a key player in several landmark projects in the computing industry since the late 1970s. Gaining experience as an engineering manager at DEC and Data General in the 1970s, he became a director of engineering at Apple Computer in the early 1980s. There he led the Apple Lisa project, the forerunner to the Macintosh. He then went on to work at Sun Microsystems and headed the spin-off First Person. At Sun Labs, his team developed Java.
- Terry Winograd
Terry Allen Winograd (born February 24, 1946) is a professor of computer science at Stanford University. He is known within the philosophy of mind and artificial intelligence fields for his work on natural language using the SHRDLU program. SHRDLU was written in the years from 1968-70. In making the program Winograd was concerned with the problem of providing a computer with sufficient "understanding" to be able to use natural language.
- Spencer Kimball
Spencer Kimball is a computer programmer most notable for his early work on the GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP). In 1995, while students at the University of California at Berkeley, Kimball and his classmate Peter Mattis developed the first version of The GIMP as a class project. The two were also members of a student club at Berkeley called the eXperimental Computer Facility (XCF). Kimball said in 1999 that, "From the first line of source code to the last, …
- Wei-Hwa Huang
Wei-Hwa Huang is an award-winning American puzzler and member of the US Team for the World Puzzle Federation. Huang was a Putnam Fellow in 1993. Huang has won the annual World Puzzle Championship on four occasions: 1995 and 1997-1999. Huang graduated from Montgomery Blair High School and the California Institute of Technology and is currently an employee at Google. One of his most famous projects was the "Da Vinci Code Quest" on Google, …
- Kevin Fox
http://www.fury.com;.
- Andrés Pérez-Bergquist
Amazingly enough, I maintain a MySpace profile not because I want to, but because it's part of my job. Yes, I'm partly responsible for the ads that show up on this site. Not the monkey-punching ones, or the ones with scantily clad women (though I realize many people might appreciate those). I'm behind the plain, simple ones that don't try and gouge you in the visual system. Not that it really matters, because there's the rest of the page, and as we can all plainly see,.
- Joshua Li
Accomplished executive with experience leading customer service, production, sales and marketing, operations, strategic planning, and cross-functional teams. Implemented significant Six Sigma Black Belt cost reduction project. Strong project and people management and problem solving skills. Fluent in Mandarin Chinese with Asia work experience. Honors at Harvard BA and UCLA MBA. Email: joshli2@gmail.com. Check out my new blog: www.altimeter.blogspot.com. Altimeter - Networking to Help . . .
- Joey Freeland
I'm a dork. I have skills. I like geeky things such as Linux and Networking. I've lived in many places including California, Germany, Virginia, Kansas City (816), Tampa, Chicago, Oregon, and I'm now back in California.
- David Wiesen
I'm not always sure. Sometimes I'm a computer nerd, sometimes I'm a theatre geek, and sometimes I'm an athlete and a sports fan. I'm not really sure which one of these I really am. Maybe I'm all of them.
- Peter Dolan
- Bennet Yee
Geek, all geek. My Erdos number is 3; my Tarjan number is 4. While I am generally easygoing, I am professionally paranoid.
- Rong Ou
- Chade-Meng Tan
- Heather Huffman
- Steve Okamoto
- Suzanne Frey
Top-producing operations executive with broad-based experience in the design, development and global market introduction of advanced services and technologies to meet business, competitive and customer demands. Accomplished in technical architecture/applications development, marketing, and business development for complex, multi-million dollar engagements. Decisive and intuitive problem solver with superb ability to formulate enterprise business strategies to improve performance and . . .
- Adam J. Freed
- Paul Mantyla
- Andria R Ruben
- Vinay Bhargava
- Douglas E Merrill
- Jorg A Brown
- Ann Mei Chang
- Matthew H Austern
- Shona L Brown