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SPEAKER: NICHOLAS NEGROPONTE
Author, Being Digital
The world's pre-eminent speaker on information technology is a visionary
who foresees new ways of accessing and understanding information.
He explains how digital technology is fundamentally changing telecommunications
and gives insights into the digital age.
His presentations draw from his bestseller, Being Digital, the definitive
guide to the information superhighway. Published in more than thirty
languages, it earned a spot on The New York Times bestseller list
just weeks after its 1995 release.
Until recently, Negrponte was a senior columnist for the widely read
magazines, Wired. His work has appeared both in print and on the Web
at www.hotwire.com. He recently started a venture capital fund, Portos,
for early stage Internet companies.
Negroponte is a founder and chairman of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology's uniquely innovative Media Laboratory.
The ten-year-old Media Lab, an interdisciplinary, multi-million dollar
research center of unparalleled intellectual and technological resources,
focuses exclusively on the study and experimentation of future forms
of human and machine communication.
Key Topics:
Things
That Think
News in
the Future
Television
of Tomorrow
Perceptual
Computing
Learning
and Common Sense
Negroponte studied at MIT, where as a graduate student he specialized
in the then new field of computer-aided design. He joined the Institutes
faculty in 1966, and for several years divided his teaching between
MIT and visiting professorships at Yale, Michigan, and the University
of California at Berkeley.
In 1968, he founded MITs pioneering Architecture Machine Group,
a combination lab and think tank responsible for many radically new
approaches to the human-computer interface. Out of this experience
came several influential texts, including: The Architecture Machine,
Soft Architecture Machine, and Computer Aids to Design and Architecture.
In 1980, he was founding chairman of the International Federation
of Information Processing Societies Computers in Everyday Life
program in Amsterdam. Two years later, Negroponte accepted the French
governments invitation to become the first executive director
of the World Center for Personal Computation and Human Development,
an experimental project designed to explore technologys potential
for enhancing primary education in under-developed countries.
Beyond his work with Wired and his bestselling book, he is a special
general partner in a venture capital fund dedicated to new technologies
for information and entertainment.
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| European Speakers
Bureau |
phone +32 (0)2 646 13 83 |
fax +32 (0)2 646 41 73
11 Rue Castex, 75004 Paris, France |
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