1. Walter Mossberg

    Walter S. Mossberg (born March 27 1947) is the principal technology columnist for the "Wall Street Journal". His "Personal Technology" column has appeared every Thursday since 1991. He also writes the "Mossberg Solution" column each Wednesday (co-authored with his assistant, Katherine Boehret), and the "Mossberg's Mailbox" column on Thursdays.

  2. Soledad O'Brien

    Soledad O'Brien is the co-anchor of CNN American Morning . She joined CNN in 2003. The program is based in New York City and is CNN's flagship morning program. At CNN she was part of the team that won a George Foster Peabody award for coverage of Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath. She was part of the team that won an Alfred I DuPont award for the coverage of the tsunami disaster in Southeast Asia in December 2004.

  3. Jeremy Wagstaff

    technology columnist for The Wall Street Journal's Online and Asian editions, who also does a weekly spot on the BBC World Service and a few other bits and pieces.

  4. Dan Gillmor

    Dan Gillmor , Center for Citizen Media, Author of We the Media: Grassroots Journalism by the People, Member at Large

  5. Mark Kellner

    Mark A. Kellner became news editor in April, 2007. He came to the Adventist Review from a business publishing unit of the Gannett Company. Prior to joining Gannett, Mark served from February, 2003, to October, 2006, as assistant director for news and information of the General Conference. In 2007, Mark celebrates 35 years of writing for publication, beginning with a stamp collecting column for his hometown weekly newspaper.

  6. Steve Wildstrom

    Steve Wildstrom created BusinessWeek’s “Technology and You” column in 1994. The goal of the column, which appears weekly at BusinessWeek Online, is to help readers understand and use personal technology to enhance their jobs and their lives. Before starting “Technology and You,” Wildstrom served as senior news editor in BusinessWeek’s Washington bureau and edited the Washington Outlook column.

  7. Laura Forlano

    I have over ten years of professional experience in writing, research and public policy with a specific focus on media, technology and communications. My Ph.D. dissertation is an ethnographic study of mobile work practices focusing on three interrelated phenomenon - the growth of the freelance and entrepreneurial work and the transformation of organizations; the widespread use of mobile and wireless technologies; and, the changing role of 'third spaces' such as . . .

  8. James Derk

    I currently am responsible for IT execution for GE Plastics in Mount Vernon, Indiana. My new book "Hungarian Rhapsody: An Adoption Story," is available on online booksellers, bookstores near you and, in about six months, in a cutout bin at a remainder store in the mall. Get it while you can still pay full price. Prior to joining GE in May of 2000, I was new media editor for The Evansville Courier & Press. I was involved in the genesis of computer-assisted reporting and . . .

  9. Keith Stuart
  10. Mike Wendland

    I'm the tech columnist for The Detroit Free Press snd the Internet correspondent for NBC-TV affiliates.

  11. Abhishek Raju

    IP Professional with over four years of experience in end to end IP management. IP Portfolio Management, IP Strategy consulting. Interested in Consulting with Technology companies on IP commercialization issues.

  12. Carlos Alberto Teixeira
  13. Mike Langberg
  14. Alison Stewart
  15. Adam Straub
  16. Aleks Krotoski
  17. Nora Young
  18. Mike Wendland
  19. Vero Pepperrell
  20. David Pogue

    David Pogue Popular author, NY Times columnist, speaker David Pogue grew up in Shaker Heights, OH, a suburb of Cleveland. (Mom's the Welcome Wagon lady; dad's a lawyer.) He was a music/theatre geek from Day 1, starring in, composing, playing piano for, or conducting musicals and choirs from elementary school through high school. He was also a language jock, winning the Ohio Spelling Bee in 1977, and a magician, performing over 400 magic shows during his teen years.

  21. Dan Gillmor

    Dan Gillmor is director of the new Knight Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship and Kauffman Professor of Digital Media Entrepreneurship at Arizona State University's Cronkite School of Journalism & Mass Communication. The project aims to help students appreciate the startup culture of risk-taking, and to foster new media products and services. Dan is also director of the Center for Citizen Media, a project to enhance and expand grassroots media and its reach.

  22. Dan Gillmor