- Diane R. Swanson
Diane R. Swanson , CEO, Editor - Rev. James G.W. Fisher
Rev. James G.W. Fisher is CEO of Positive Marketing International, Inc., where he works on the convergence and evolution in productive marketing communication and technology. Rev. Fisher is a board member and founder of ChildSafe International, Corp., (CSI), the organization responsible for the development of the Internet ChildSafe Certification Standard. In 2002, Rev. Fisher was a guest speaker at the Global Internet Summit, which was held in Orlando, Fl. Representatives from all over . . . - Soomit Dasgupta
- Dan Muir
- Uday Shankar
- Linda Wright
- Gaurav Kapoor
- Ameya Sathaye
- Michael Arrington
I am the editor of TechCrunch and owner of the TechCrunch Network of blog and podcasting sites. - Dave Winer
Dave Winer , 39, has been a commercial software developer, marketer and software demoer since 1979. Winer pioneered the category of outline processing, shipping ThinkTank for the IBM PC, Apple II and Macintosh in 1983 and 1984; Ready for the IBM PC in 1985 and MORE for Macintosh in 1986. MORE won MacUser's first Product of the Year Eddy in 1986. He founded and was president of Living Videotext, Inc., which merged with Symantec in 1987. - Jason Calacanis
Jason McCabe Calacanis is CEO and co-founder of Weblogs Inc., a network of close to 100 widely read blogs including Engadget, Joystiq, Luxist, Gadling and Blogging Baby. Weblogs, Inc. was founded in January of 2004 and spurred the growth of blogs. The company a wholly owned subsidiary of AOL in November of 2005. Calacanis, who was appointed a senior vice president of the AOL, maintains editorial supervision of Weblogs. - Danny Sullivan
Danny wrote Yahoo Surveys Search Rewards Idea where he covers a News.com article showing how a group of Yahoo! Mail users were offered "10 different potential reward options" to take a Yahoo! search survey. Kinda funny, I told them they should do this at last years SES San Jose conference - that they don't have to necessarily pay money to get answers. I am sure it wasn't my influence, since it did take almost a year to implement. - Barry Diller
Since December 1992, beginning with QVC, Mr. Diller has served as chief executive for a number of predecessor companies engaged in media and interactivity prior to the formation of IAC. From October 1984 to April 1992, Mr. Diller served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Fox, Inc. and was responsible for the creation of Fox Broadcasting Company in addition to Fox's motion picture operations. - Bruce Sterling
Author, journalist, editor, and critic, Bruce Sterling is also leader of the Viridians an online ecological design community. He has written eight science fiction novels, and edited the anthology Mirrorshades, the definitive document of the cyberpunk movement. He also wrote the non-fiction book The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the Electronic Frontier (1992), available electronically on the Internet. - Esther Dyson
Esther Dyson is a self-described authority on emerging digital technology, and considered a founding member of the digerati. Esther Dyson is the daughter of Freeman Dyson, a physicist, and Verana Huber-Dyson, a mathematician, and the sister of the digital technology historian George Dyson. After graduating from Harvard in economics, she joined Forbes as a fact-checker and quickly rose to reporter. - John Brockman
Mr. John Brockman Editor, Edge Foundation - Kweisi Mfume
Mr. Mfume became President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) on February 20, 1996, after being unanimously elected to the position by the NAACP's Board of Directors. Previously he held a seat in the United States Congress where he represented Maryland's 7th Congressional District for ten years. - Donald Allen
Donald Merriam Allen, influential editor, publisher, and translator of contemporary American literature. He is perhaps best known for his project "The New American Poetry 1945-1960" (1960), among the several important anthologies of contemporary American "innovative" writing he made available to the public. Allen's impact as an editor, publisher, and friend to poets continued to be felt well into the 21st century. - Charles Ardai
Charles Ardai (born 1969) is an entrepreneur, writer, and editor. He is best known as the founder and CEO of Juno, an Internet company, and more recently as the founder and editor of Hard Case Crime, a line of pulp-style paperback crime novels. Ardai's writing has appeared in mystery magazines such as "Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine" and "Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine", … - Tim O'Reilly
Tim O'Reilly is the founder and CEO of O'Reilly Media, Inc., thought by many to be the best computer book publisher in the world, and an activist for open standards. O'Reilly Media also publishes online through the O'Reilly Network and hosts conferences on technology topics, including the O'Reilly Open Source Convention, the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference, and the Web 2.0 Conference. - Dee Hock
Dee Hock is a man with a rich history. He relates a large part of that personal history in Birth of the Chaordic Age even though, he claims, this is not a story about him, nor about VISA International, although both figure prominently in the tale. The book is not so much a story at all, but a passionate manifesto for the future of business and society as a whole. - Briton Hadden
Briton Hadden (February 18, 1898 - February 27, 1929) was the co-founder of Time Magazine with his Yale classmate Henry Luce. Hadden got his start in newspaper writing at the Hotchkiss Record, a newspaper at the Hotchkiss prep school. At Yale, Hadden was elected to the staff of the Yale Daily News and later served as the paper's chairman twice (1917-1918 and 1919-1920). Luce was the News' managing editor both times. - Lawrence Kudlow
Lawrence Kudlow expresses faith in Messiah after emerging from a battle with addiction. In the 1980s he served as undersecretary of US Office of Management and Budget. In 1994 The New York Times published a full-page article, "A Wall Street Star's Agonizing Confession," about Kudlow's life and addiction to cocaine. - Peter Coad
In 1986, Peter Coad founded Object International, a software consulting firm where he served as President. During the 1990s Coad co-authored six books on the analysis, design, and programming of object-oriented software. During this time Coad became famous through his work on the Coad/Yourdon method for Object-oriented analysis (OOA) which he had developed together with Edward Yourdon. - Prudy Taylor Board
Prudy Taylor Board (born 21 December 1933), who also writes under the name Pudence F. Board, is an award-winning author and editor. She was born in Florida. With more than 1,000 magazine and newspaper articles published, she has also authored several novels and many nonfiction books in addition to Travel books about Florida and the Caribbean. A former reporter/feature writer she has edited newspapers, … - Bill Phillips
William Nathaniel "Bill" Phillips is an American entrepreneur and author. He is best known as the author of the best-selling fitness book "Body for Life: 12 Weeks to Mental and Physical Strength". He is also the author "Eating for Life", founder and former editor in chief of Muscle Media magazine (now defunct) and the former CEO of EAS, a performance nutritional supplement company. - Grahame Lynch
Grahame founded Decisive in 1994, launching the Communications Day newsletter. He won the Australian Telecommunications Users Group Journalist of the Year award in 1996 and the Service Providers' Association of Australia Media Excellence award in 1997. He then took leave-of-absence from Decisive, joining Advanstar in Hong Kong as group editor of Telecom Asia and Telecom China . Here, he launched Wireless Asia magazine. - Eric Hahn
Eric Hahn is an American entrepreneur who started Collabra Software in 1992. Collabra was an early e-mail-based groupware company. Netscape acquired Collabra in 1995. In 1997 Eric became Netscape's CTO. According to SEC filings Hahn netted approximately $29 million from sales in Netscape stock. Hahn is also the creator of Lookout Software, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2004. Mr. Hahn currently lives in Palo Alto, California with his wife and two sons, … - José Antonio Zapata
Jose Antonio Zapata Cabral (1969 -) is a journalist and editor of the newspaper METRO in Aguascalientes city. Born in 1969. Former CEO of the news web site Cu4tro.com. In the winter of 1999 he became the first digital journalist in Aguascalientes, starting with Cu4tro.com, the first news portal ever made for this city. During the existence of Cu4tro.com, Antonio Zapata discovered that the Foundation Act of Aguascalientes city was stolen from the Historical Archive. - Justin Hall
Justin Hall (born December 16, 1974 in Chicago, Illinois), is an American freelance journalist who is best known as a pioneer blogger (internet-based diarist), and for writing reviews from game conferences such as E3 and the Tokyo Game Show. He graduated from Chicago's Francis W. Parker High School in 1993, and in 1994, while a student at Swarthmore College, started his web-based diary "Justin's Links from the Underground", … - Predrag Gosta
Predrag Gosta (born 14 January, 1972 in Belgrade, Serbia) is an American conductor and harpsichordist. Predrag Gosta is the Artistic Director and conductor of New Trinity Baroque, an early music ensemble, baroque orchestra and choir based in Atlanta, USA. He is also the Music Director and conductor of the Gwinnett Ballet Theatre, based in Snellville, Atlanta vicinity. He was educated in Europe and USA, and has recorded several CDs, … - Peter Pek
Peter Pek <small>MCSD</small> is a brand strategist, writer, columnist, editor, publisher, designer, creative director, public speaker and television personality from Malaysia. He is best known as the creative director of "New Nation", a British tabloid; the editor-in-chief of "Food & Beverage" magazine; publisher of Malaysian "Superbrands"; and for his work in branding. - Rael Dornfest
Rael Dornfest is Founder and CEO of Portland, Oregon-based Values of n. Rael leads the Values of n charge with passion, unearthly creativity, and a repertoire of puns and jokes - some of which are actually good. - Tao Yang
Tao Yang (born 1970) is a computer scientist. He attended Tongji University, where he received his Bachelor's degree in 1990 and his Master's degree in 1993. He has invented fuzzy cellular neural networks (FCNN) in 1995, computational verb in 1997, chaotic digital CDMA (with L.O. Chua) in 1997, computational verb theory in 2001, physical linguistics in 2002, and the theory of the Unicogse in 2004. - Julianne Malveaux
Dr. Julianne Malveaux is the President of Bennet College for Women. Recognized for her progressive and insightful observations, she is also an economist, author and commentator. Dr. Malveaux's contributions to the public dialogue on issues such as race, culture, gender, and their economic impacts, are shaping public opinion in the 21st century America. - A. Scott Berg
Andrew Scott Berg (b. December 4 1949, Norwalk, Connecticut) is a multi-award-winning American biographer. He has authored biographies of Katharine Hepburn, Maxwell Perkins, Samuel Goldwyn, Charles Lindbergh and wife Anne Morrow Lindbergh. He is currently working on a biography of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson. - Walter Isaacson
Walter Isaacson "is the President and CEO of the Aspen Institute . He has been the Chairman and CEO of CNN and the Managing Editor of Time Magazine. He is the author of Benjamin Franklin : An American Life (2003) and of Kissinger: A Biography (1992) and is the coauthor of The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made (1986). His biography of Albert Einstein - Einstein: His Life and Universe - was released in April 2007. "Isaacson was born on May 20, 1952, in New Orleans. - Ravi Desai
Ravi Desai was the founding Editor in chief who became the CEO of TheStreet.com, a post he held for 4 months before being fired by Jim Cramer for myriad reasons, including blackmail. Desai pledged $2 million to the University of Washington and another $2 million to the University of Florida, along with $1 million to the University of New Hampshire poetry programs. No university ever received more than several thousand dollars of the pledge. - Paul Jay
Paul Jay CEO and Senior Editor - Dieter Stein
Dieter Stein is a German journalist, publisher and chief editor and founder of the liberal-conservative newspaper "Junge Freiheit". Stein grew up in Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg and studied political science and history at Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg from 1986 to 1993. In 1986, Stein founded the "Junge Freiheit" as a reaction to the "dominance of the leftist '68 generation". In 1990, Stein founded the "Junge Freiheit Verlag GmbH & Co KG", …
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