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Vernor
Vinge -
Mathematician, computer scientist and author of
"True Names" and "The Coming
Technological Singularity." In 1982, at a
panel for AAAI-82, Vernor Vinge proposed that in
the near future technology would accelerate the
evolution of intelligence, leading to a
"singularity." In the 1980s and 1990s,
he elaborated on this theme in his writing. He
taught at San Diego State University from
1972-2000. He is the author of two Hugo Award
winners.
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George
Gilder -
Gilder is the editor in chief of the Gilder
Technology Report and the author of The Silicon
Eye. He is a senior fellow at the Discovery
Institute. He is a founder of and contributor to
Forbes ASAP and a contributing editor of Forbes
magazine. He is the author of a number of
important books, including "Life After
Television," "Telecosm" and
"The Silicon Eye."
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Alex
Lightman -
Lightman is co-founder and CEO of Charmed
Technology, a developer of wearable wireless
technology. He was CEO of the IPv6 Summit in
2005. He is a leading writer and speaker on the
future of technology, writing the book
"Brave New Unwired World" and
publishing more than 100 articles between 2000
and 2006 for business, technology and political
magazines. He has been a marketing manager for
Reuters and Intellicorp.
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Patrick
Lincoln -
Lincoln is Director of the Computer Science
Laboratory at SRI International in Menlo Park,
CA. He has a Ph.D. in Computer Science from
Stanford University. He has worked at the Los
Alamos National Laboratory and MCC Software
Technology. One of his recent research pieces is
"Towards a Semantic Framework for Secure
Agents."
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Thomas
Malone -
Malone is a leading professor at the MIT Sloan
School of Management. He is also the founder and
director of the MIT Center for Coordination
Science and was one of the two founding
co-directors of the MIT Initiative on
"Inventing the Organizations of the 21st
Century." He teaches classes on leadership
and information technology and his research
focuses on the influence of information
technology on business. His 2004 book "The
Future of Work" is a classic in the
field.
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David
Smith -
Smith is the principal architect at the Croquet
Project, where he works with Alan Kay and other
technology visionaries. Smith has been focused on
interactive 3D and using 3D as a basis for new
user environments and entertainment for nearly 20
years. He designed The Colony, the first 3D
interactive game, and he cofounded Red Storm
Entertainment with Tom Clancy. He previously
worked at Thermo Electron Corporation,
Softrobotics and the Thomas Lord Research
Center.
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John
Smart -
Smart is the founder and president of
Acceleration Studies Foundation, a nonprofit
community for research, education, consulting and
select advocacy, and the co-producer of
Accelerating Change Conferences. He is a
developmental systems theorist who studies
accelerating change, computational autonomy and
the technological singularity.
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Sri
Sridharan -
Sridharan began working with computers in India
in the 1960s. He worked, was educated and/or
taught in a number of disciplines at Stanford,
Technische Universitat (Munich) and Rutgers
before founding the Pitman/Morgan-Kaufmann series
of monographs on AI. He has worked in leadership
positions at BBN Labs, FMC and Intel, where he
was chief architect for Knowledge Management
until 2000. He is now semi-retired, and has
founded TrustNet to advance human trust.
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Tom
Munnecke -
Munnecke spent 30 years designing large-scale
hospital-information systems for the VA and
Department of Defense, then quit his job as a VP
and chief scientist for a Fortune 500 company and
founded GivingSpace, a think tank that explores
uses for technology in humanitarian
activities. He founded the Uplift Academy, which
seeks to use global networks to discover
what's working to make the world a better
place and how to do more of it.
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Frode
Hegland -
Hegland was born in Norway and currently works in
London at University College on research project
called “Liquid Information” which
allows all users to make connections, change the
way information is presented and relate it to
other information on the web. It allows a user to
make each word in an online document a potential
hyperlink and allow users to process data in any
conceivable manner.
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Allen
Taylor -
Taylor is editor of the Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers BEEEP. He has been
president of the Oregon chapter of the National
Space Society. He designs attack-resistant
networks. He has written 20 books, including
"Database Development for Dummies." He
teaches an e-course on database development
through a network of more than 1,000 community
colleges and adult-education institutions.
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Melanie
Swan - Swan,
president of Cygnet Capital, is a professional
options trader and portfolio manager based in
Silicon Valley. She has concentrated her career
in investment management, strategic technology
development, finance and entrepreneurship. She
formerly served as research director of telecom
economics for RHK Inc., a communications industry
consultancy.
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Bruno
Haid - Haid
is a co-founder and the head of strategy at
System One, a company merging social software,
the sematic web and artificial intelligence.
Earlier in his career, he worked at
spielplatz.cc, now part of the Global Tribal DDB
network, one of the top mobile marketing agencies
in Europe.
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Robin
Raskin -
Raskin is the former editor in chief of FamilyPC,
editor of PC Magazine and columnist for USA Today
Online and the Gannett News Service. She has
written six books about parenting in the digital
age, and she advocates parental involvement in
raising digital kids. She frequently addresses
parents and educators, policy makers and leaders
in the high-tech industry on topics like internet
safety and raising digital kids.
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Stephen
Aguilar-Millan - Aguilar-Millan is the director
of research at the European Futures Observatory,
and his expertise is in societal futures as they
are influenced by technology. He is currently
working on a project examining the social
boundaries to technological development.
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Niti
Bhan - Bhan
is a strategic design consultant who writes for
the Perspective blog and contributes to the
global innovation forum CPH127. She is working on
a paper combining the characteristics of liminal
space and its value as the engine or root cause
of innovation. She is an engineer based in the
Silicon Valley.
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David
Swedlow -
Swedlow is a software quality assurance engineer
from Austin, Texas. He is working on a
social-software consulting project. He is a
co-founder of Synergy for Practical Conceptual
Innovation. He is co-writing a book on Situation
Mapping. He was a presenter at the 2005
International Conference of the American
Creativity Association.
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Jim
Turner - Jim
Turner is an administrator with the Acceleration
Studies Foundation. He says that in the short
term the capacity for human organization and
communication is where we are going to see the
acceleration in technological growth specifically
in terms of the adaptations of those
technologies.
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Justin
Lee - Lee is
from Singapore, and is participating NUS Overseas
College Program at the Stanford Center for
Professional Development, focusing on learning
how companies are started and how universities
commercialize technology and bring that
information into the marketplace. He has
experience in information systems and expects to
work in the software industry.
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Samuel
Coniglio -
Coniglio is a writer and photographer. He's a
former NASA employee, and he worked at the
Kennedy Space Center as a technical writer. He is
writing a book on space tourism, he is founder of
the Space Tourism Society and works to promote
the private space industry.
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Harold
Linstone -
Linstone is the editor and chief of the
international journal Technological Forecasting and
Social Change and a professor emeritus of the
Systems Science Ph.D. Program at Portland State
University. His particular field of interest is in
the likelihood of the continuation of the
Kondratleff long-wave cycle in the 21st century.
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Douglas
Engelbart -
Engelbart is a winner of the National Medal of
Technology and an inspiration for most if not all
of today's technology innovators. Among many
achievements, he demonstrated the first computer
mouse and the first use of a cathode-ray tube to
display computer text and graphics, but his
biggest contributions, through his Bootstrap
Institute and associated efforts, come in his
effort to inspire society to use innovation to
tackle complex problems in ethical ways.
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