 
SPEAKER: BRUNO GIUSSANI
"Internet and mobile communications expert
Author of "Roam. Making Sense of the Wireless Internet"
Bruno Giussani is a recognised specialist on technology trends and
their business and social implications, with a main focus on the
"wireless Internet", e-business and m-business.
A "realistic futurist" Bruno is able to communicate what
is happening in this fast changing area, and the implications of
these changes, simply and in a way which audiences can apply to
their world.
His experience is international which means that he can bring a
global perspective to his speeches.
He is fluent in English, Italian and French.
Bruno Giussani is the author of Roam: Making Sense of the Wireless
Internet [italian edition: Senza Fili. Lequivoco dellInternet
mobile, e come uscirne] and the Director of Innovation of 3G Mobile,
a Swiss mobile communication company.
He is Vice-Chairman of the Board of Tinext, a software and web-services
company which he co-founded in 2000 as well as Tinet, one of the
first Swiss Internet services companies, and in 1995. He lectures
on the Management of Technology at the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology (EPFL, Lausanne) and is a frequent speaker at Internet
and wireless conferences.
Prior to his current activities Bruno was the Director of Internet
Strategy at the World Economic Forum and an award-winning journalist;
European Editor of The Industry Standard magazine; European Internet
columnist for The New York Times; technology columnist for L'Hebdo,
a Swiss weekly newsmagazine, and Bilan, a Swiss business monthly.
He has also held political and business editorial positions for
several other magazines and newspapers in Europe and was awarded
the Swiss Prize for Journalism for his articles on information technologies.
Bruno is one of the 50 people profiled in Europe's A-List. The Movers
and Shakers of the European Cyber-Scene, by Liza Roberts (February
2001).
He is a member of the advisory committee of Transitions Online,
a Prague-based independent news organisation covering 28 countries
in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet regions, and is an advisor
to Netaid, a New-York based organisation fighting poverty in the
developing world.
He co-operates with the Institute for the Future in Palo Alto and
with the Center for the Global Dialogue in Zurich/Rueschlikon.
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