- George Eastman
George Eastman founded the Eastman Kodak Company and invented roll film, helping to bring photography to the mainstream. The roll film was also the basis for the invention of the motion picture film in 1888 by world's first filmmaker, Louis Le Prince, and a decade later by his followers Léon Bouly, Thomas Edison, the Lumière Brothers and Georges Méliès. <sup></sup
- Patricia Russo
Patricia Russo (born in 1953, in Trenton, New Jersey) is the current chief executive officer of Alcatel-Lucent, one of the world's largest manufacturing firms. Lucent was a spin-off from AT&T of its Systems and Technology units (AT&T Technologies, Inc., the former Western Electric), and the manufacturing and research and development operations, including Bell Laboratories.
- Steven Sasson
Steven J. Sasson (b. 1950) is an electrical engineer and the inventor of the digital camera. His invention began in 1975 with a very broad assignment from his supervisor at Eastman Kodak Company, Gareth A. Lloyd: Could a camera be built using solid state electronics, solid state imagers, an electronic sensor known as a charge coupled device (CCD) that gathers optical information? Texas Instruments Inc.
- Gordon Parks
Gordon Roger Alexander Buchannan Parks (November 30, 1912 - March 7, 2006) was a groundbreaking African-American photographer, musician, poet, novelist, journalist, activist and film director. He is best remembered for his photo essays for "Life" magazine and as the director of the 1971 film "Shaft".
- Henry Strong
Henry Alvah Strong (1839 - 1919) was a U.S. photography businessman. He was the first president of the Eastman Kodak Company between 1884 and 1919.
- Laura D'Andrea Tyson
Laura D'Andrea Tyson (b. June 28, 1947, New Jersey) is an American economist and former Chair of the President's Council of Economic Advisers. She also served as Director of the National Economic Council. She is currently a professor at the Haas School of Business of the University of California, Berkeley. From 2002 to 2006, Tyson was the first female Dean of the London Business School. From 1998 to 2001, she was Dean of the Haas School of Business.
- Bob Brust
Bob Brust is the former Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of Eastman Kodak. He retired in November of 2006, and was replaced by Frank S. Sklarsky.
- Kenneth Mees
Charles Edward Kenneth Mees (May 26, 1882-August 15, 1960) was a British-American physicist and photographic researcher. He was born in Wellingborough, England, the son of a Wesleyan minister, and attended the University of London. In 1906 he was awarded his D.Sc. with a dissertation on photographic theory. From 1906 until 1912 he worked for Wratten and Wainwright, Ltd., assisting Frederick Wratten in developing the first panchromatic photographic plates, …
- Alfred Eisenstaedt
Alfred Eisenstaedt (December 6 1898 - August 24 1995) was a German American photographer and photojournalist. He is renowned for his candid photographs, frequently made using a 35mm Leica M3 rangefinder camera. He is best remembered for his photograph capturing the celebration of V-J Day.
- Harry Coover
Harry Coover (b. March 6, 1919) invented cyanoacrylate glue. He was born in Newark, Delaware. He received his B.S. from Hobart College and his M.S. and Ph.D. from Cornell University. Coover invented the cyanoacrylate adhesive called "super glue", while working at Eastman Kodak in 1942. He holds 460 patents and is responsible for advances in the fields of graft polymerization, organophosphorus chemistry, and olefin polymerization.
- Rudolf Kingslake
Rudolf Kingslake (1903-2003) was an eminent academician, lens designer, and engineer. Rudolf Kingslake was born in London, England in 1903. He studied optical design at the Imperial College of Science and Technology, under eminent optical designer and theoretician Alexander Eugene Conrady, and earned a Masters degree in Optical Design. Kingslake later married Professor Conrady's daughter, Hilda.
- Kary Mullis
Kary Banks Mullis, Ph.D. (born December 28, 1944) is an American biochemist and Nobel laureate. Dr Mullis was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1993 for his development of the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), a central technique in biochemistry and molecular biology which allows the amplification of specified DNA sequences. Dr Mullis subsequently was awarded the Japan Prize that same year.
- Terry Deglau
Terry Deglau is the portrait photographer chosen by the United Nations to take the group photo of the world's leaders at the 2000 United Nations Millennium Project in New York. He had done a similar photograph for the UN's 50th anniversary celebration in 1995, and has done portraits of five U.S. Presidents. Deglau also produced and organized the photography of the 100 "4th of July people" for the "Photo of the Century" July 4, 1999 in Philadelphia.
- Jules Brulatour
Jules Brulatour, was a pioneering figure in U.S. silent cinema. Beginning as American distribution representative for Lumiere Freres raw film stock in 1907, he joined producer Carl Laemmle in forming the Motion Picture Distributing and Sales Company in 1909, effectively weakening the stronghold of the Motion Picture Patents Company, headed by Thomas Edison, a large trust company that was then monopolizing the American film industry through contracts with hand-picked, …
- Darren Rowse
Darren Rowse is the blogger behind ProBlogger.net (a blog teaching bloggers to make money blogging and grow successful blogs) and Digital-Photography-School.com/blog - two of the highest ranking blogs in Australia. He is a full-time blogger himself, making a six-figure income from blogging now since 2005. Darren co-founded b5media - a venture capital backed blog network with over 350 blogs across 11 verticals.
- Frances Benjamin Johnston
Frances "Fannie" Benjamin Johnston was one of the earliest American female photographers and photojournalists. The only surviving child of wealthy and well connected parents, she was raised in Washington D.C. and studied at the Académie Julian in Paris and the Washington Students League.
- David Hare
David Hare (March 10, 1917 - December 21, 1992) was an American artist, associated with the Surrealist movement. He is primarily known for his sculpture, though he also worked extensively in photography and painting. In the late 1930s, with no previous artistic training, he began to experiment with color photography.
- Henry Louis Gibson
Henry Louis Gibson was born in Truro, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom and died in Rochester, New York State, United States of America. He was for many years editor and consultant in medical, biological, scientific, and technical photography for the Eastman Kodak Company. He received his B.Sc. degree in physics from the University of Illinois. He was an expert in medical uses of infrared and had pioneered its use in detecting breast cancer.
- George Davison
George Davison (born Lowestoft 1854; died Antibes 26 December 1930). Davison was a noted English photographer, a proponent of impressionistic photography, a co-founder of the Linked Ring Brotherhood of British artists and a managing director of Kodak UK. He was also a millionaire, thanks to an early investment in Eastman Kodak. He married twice, his second wife being Florence ("Joan") Anne Austin-Jones (c.1897-1955). She married second Malcolm Arbuthnot.
- Claude Fayette Bragdon
Claude Fayette Bragdon (1866-1946) was an American architect, writer, and stage designer. Although born in Ohio, Bragdon's principal work was in the Rochester, New York area. He was well regarded for his ink rendering talent and his study of geometric ornament. He was most proud of his designs for Rochester's New York Central Railroad Station, the Rochester First Universalist Church, and the Rochester Italian Presbyterian Church, among many others.
- Sandy Riedel
Sandy Riedel is Director of Special Projects for GoSecure. An innovative Information Security Company that offers the most reliable and secure solution. GoSecure gives you the tools to connect, share, and communicate information while staying in complete control of what is visible to whom - on the Internet and your computer. Upgrade your Privacy - GoSecure.
- David MacAdam
Dr. David MacAdam (1910-1998) graduated from Upper Darby High School in 1928. In 1980, he became only the second inductee of the Upper Darby High School's Wall of Fame, (Jim Croce was first). Dr. MacAdam was chairman of the U.S. Technical Commission on Colorimetry and the International Commission on Illumination. He was also head of the image structure at Eastman Kodak Research Laboratory. Dr.
- Arthur Andrews
Arthur Glenn Andrews (born January 15, 1909) is a politician most widely known for a single term as a U.S. Representative from Alabama. He was born in Anniston, Calhoun County, Alabama. He attended the Birmingham public schools where he graduated from Phillips High School and Mercersburg Academy. He went on the graduate from Princeton University with an A.B. degree in 1931.
- Ludwik Silberstein
Ludwik Silberstein was a Polish-American physicist that helped make special relativity and general relativity staples of university coursework. His textbook The Theory of Relativity was published by Cambridge University Press in 1914 with a second edition, expanded to include general relativity, in 1924. Silberstein was born May 17, 1872 in Warsaw to Samuel Silberstein and Emily Steinkalk. He was educated in Cracow, Heidelberg, and Berlin.
- Marie Muchmore
Marie M. Muchmore was one of the witnesses to the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963. A color 8 mm film that she photographed is one of the primary documents of the event. The Muchmore film, with other 8 mm films taken by Abraham Zapruder and Orville Nix, was used by the Warren Commission to investigate the assassination and to position the presidential limousine in a forensic recreation of the event in May 1964.
- Eastman Kodak
Eastman Kodak is one of the most recognizable names in the corporate world. The Eastman Kodak Company located in Rochester, New York is headquarters for Kodak's worldwide operations. It is a complex involving miles of buildings and thousands of employees. In fact, there are manufacturing sites, chemical plants and office buildings on hundreds of acres. There are approximately 25,000 employees in this location.
- Masataka Takayama
Masataka Takayama was one of the most prominent Japanese photographers in the first half of the twentieth century. Takayama was born in Tokyo, Japan. As an amateur photographer, he published many of his works in the magazine "Geijutsu Shashin Kenkyū" (芸術写真研究), beginning in the 1920s. He remained an active photographer even after World War Two.
- Gerald B. Zornow
Gerald B. Zornow graduated from the University of Rochester in 1937, where he was a member of Alpha Delta Phi. He was a three-sport letter winner (football, basketball and baseball) and has been inducted into the University of Rochester Athletic Hall of Fame posthumously in 1992.
- Delano Lewis
Delano Lewis was confirmed and is now serving as the U.S. ambassador to the Republic of South Africa. Other recent presidential nominees include several career foreign service officers: Bob Gelbard (Bolivia & Philippines) as ambassador to Indonesia, Joyce Leader (Zaire) as ambassador to Guinea, and Frank Amalguer (Belize & Honduras) as ambassador to Honduras.
- Eastman Kodak
- Joseph G. Doody
- Dennis Hoffman
Dennis Hoffman is Vice President and General Manager, Data Security and Chief Strategy Officer at RSA, The Security Division of EMC. In this role, Mr. Hoffman is responsible for the strategy development, execution and financial performance of RSA's Data Security Business Unit, as well as strategic planning, strategic partnerships and business development for the RSA Division as a whole. Mr. Hoffman is a 20-year veteran of the high-technology industry.
- Wayne M. Adams
Wayne M. Adams , Treasurer and Chair Emeritus Senior Technologist, Office of the CTO EMC Corporation Wayne M. Adams is a Senior Technologist and Director of Standards within the Office of the CTO, responsible for expanding and managing EMC technology initiatives with the industry standards bodies.
- Don Newgren
- Brad Gleeson
Brad Gleeson Vice President, Business Development Before joining Planar in 2006 Mr. Gleeson co-founded and was president of ActiveLight Inc. and CineLight Corp., leading US distributors of plasma displays and home theater products. Prior to Activelight Mr. Gleeson was director of marketing at Boxlight Corp., an early manufacturer and marketer of LCD projectors.
- Tom Berarducci
A tech nerd checking out this site.
- Vince Barabba
Vince Barabba, Founder and Chairman of the Board Vince Barabba is the Chairman of our company. Until 2003 he was the general manager, Corporate Strategy and Knowledge Development of GM. He conceived the unbiased product advisor that would develop relevant, timely, and less expensive market intelligence. Vince brings considerable experience in the collection and use of market information, having twice served as Director of the U.S. Bureau of the Census.
- Deb Alcaraz-D'Andrea
While my passion lies with 4TheLuvOfDogz, I am still a techie! Keep me in mind for exciting new business ideas! Internationally experienced leader with entrepreneurial talent looking to join a team where hard work and excellence are sought and rewarded.
- Martyn Christian
Martyn Christian Vice President, Worldwide Marketing IBM Enterprise Content Management As vice president of Worldwide Marketing, Martyn Christian oversees IBM's global Enterprise Content Management (ECM) marketing strategy and initiatives. He is also responsible for the on-going development and promotion of IBM's ECM products, go-to-market strategy and segment positioning.
- Matt
Aug 2007.