Posted on
March 17th, 2012 by
David
It can be very tough to break into the social network and online media markets. Given how YouTube has virtually dominated much of the online media market and how the major Internet social networks continue to develop tools to make it easier to stream videos, share music, and distribute photos, it is a tough time to be a new online service in that niche. Even so, that has not stopped Demand Media and it is not slowing down Joanne Bradford.
Joanne Bradford is Demand Media’s Chief Revenue and Marketing Officer. Bradford joined Demand Media after working for Yahoo!, which is one of Demand Media’s biggest business rivals. It is easy to see why both Yahoo! and Demand Media would want Joanne Bradford; Bradford graduated from San Diego State University with a Bachelor’s of Arts in Journalism (Advertising). Since college, she has trail-blazed with some of the most influential companies in the tech sector and the media world. She started her ascent up the corporate ladder at publishing giant McGraw-Hill where she served as Vice President of Sales and Marketing for BusinessWeek Magazine!
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Posted on
March 16th, 2012 by
David
Given that the television has been available to consumers for almost a century now, it might seem odd to make the statement that there are very few people who “get” television. As far as the tech sector and Internet businesses who are trying to exploit the classic medium, there are very few people who “get” television. One need only look at how both Apple and Google have unsuccessfully attempted to market Smart TV products to know that the giants of the Internet simply do not understand how consumers use their televisions. Ashwin Navin, on the other hand, completely gets the television audience and through his company, Flingo, he is enhancing the television-viewing experience.
Ashwin Navin is the co-founder and CEO of Flingo. Flingo is virtually reinventing television . . . without trying to change the sloth-like way that most people view television. While it might seem like a contradiction, Navin’s approach to Smart TV programming has been very different from the approach of his competitors. Instead of trying to change television entirely, Navin and Flingo are working to enhance television. Navin created Flingo to easily provide additional content related to television on smartphones, tablet computers and other mobile devices. As well, Ashwin Navin realized that many people might enjoy seeing their YouTube and other videos on their big, expensive, sophisticated high-definition televisions. A big initial application of Flingo was linking Internet videos to your television!
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Posted on
March 15th, 2012 by
David
Sometimes, the only thing more confusing than figuring out what all of the charges on your various utility and media bills are for, is figuring out who is still providing the services you want to engage. It seems like almost every day there is a new energy provider or a local telephone company finally sells to a massive international conglomerate. The telephone, mobile phone and smartphone market has been an especially volatile one, made more so with the rise of cell phones and smart phones. One of the companies that remains in the industry longer than many analysts anticipated is Cricket. One of the reasons for the company’s continued survival is Annette M. Jacobs.
Annette M. Jacobs is the West Area President for Leap Wireless International, the parent company of cell phone service provider Cricket. Jacobs went to work for Leap Wireless International in 2010 and at the time, many suspected that Cricket – which was closing many of its retail locations with their iconic green couches – was in the process of a collapse. But through the hard work of people like Annette M. Jacobs, Cricket has had a positive turnaround and the West Coast operation of Leap Wireless International is running smoother than ever!
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Posted on
March 14th, 2012 by
David
Some of the coolest ideas in the tech sector come about by accident. These accidental ideas might not have the overwhelming significance to humanity that medical science kismet discoveries – like the discovery of penicillin through bread mold – have, but they can be pretty neat in their own right and lead to surprisingly cool businesses. Andrew Houston is an American Internet pioneer whose frequent forgetfulness led to the creation of Dropbox!
Andrew (Drew) Houston studied computer science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the early 2000s. Born and raised in Massachusetts, Drew Houston frequently forgot his USB flash drives while attending MIT. Always on the run, Houston soon came to lament how forgetting his flash drive would affect his time, grades, and travel. Houston began to back up his files so he had remote access to them. When he started doing that, he realized the idea might translate into a service. With his fellow MIT graduate, Arash Ferdowski, Drew Houston translated the idea for the service into a business: Dropbox.
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Posted on
March 13th, 2012 by
David
In the ever-more-complicated online world, new social networks seem to pop up (or close down) almost every month. As you surf the web, you might be astonished to discover there have been entire social networks that you never heard of before. Some of the photo sharing and intimate social networks actually only make headlines when they shut down! But one social network you may not have heard of that is not closing down anytime soon is Yammer. And while you may not have heard of Yammer, that is not the fault of An Le!
An Le is the Vice President of Business Development for Yammer. Yammer is a company that builds social networks for private companies, almost like a social network for a business’s intranet. Yammer serves companies like Ford, LG, and Pitney Bowes and developing the network to more companies is the responsibility of An Le. As Vice President of Business Development, An Le helps businesses understand how vital an internal social network can be to increasing productivity, teamwork and corporate efficiency.
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Posted on
March 12th, 2012 by
David
There are some truly incredible minds working in academia today. The best teachers can inspire the next generation and help change the world by providing the fundamentals of their given field to their successors. But only the most jaded people actually believe the unfortunate adage “those who can’t, teach.” In fact, some of the very best educators lead by example and continue their professional development by excelling in their field while teaching. Louis McPhee is one such educator and his latest invention, a medical robot, may well change the world.
An assistant professor at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University, Louis Phee is able to translate simple ideas into complex, working technologies. Louis Phee is credited with the design of a new medical robot based upon a crab! When Lawrence Ho mentioned to Phee that cancer extraction would be much easier using a crab, over a crab dinner, Phee explored the possibility of taking that outlandish idea and making it into a reality. Louis Phee and Lawrence Ho worked together to create a surgical robot designed like a crab that is now treating cancer in the esophagus!
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Posted on
March 8th, 2012 by
David
Some companies in the technology sector work very hard for years before their brand is successful enough to have name recognition outside the industry. In 2010, two of every five personal computers that were sold used a mother board by computer manufacturer ASUS. Even so, it was not for a few years later that ASUS began to market computers effectively enough to compete in the computer manufacturing market. The transition from support company providing vital internal hardware to a recognizable brand of its own comes as the result of Jonney Shih’s hard work.
Jonney Shih is the Chief Executive Officer of ASUSTek Computer, Inc. (commonly known as ASUS). Shih has been the Chairman and CEO of ASUS since 1993 and he has presided over the company’s longest period of sustained growth. In fact, it is hard to imagine where ASUS would be if Jonney Shih were not guiding the company. Virtually every major policy that has made ASUS a household name resulted from Shih’s influence and direction.
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Posted on
March 4th, 2012 by
David
There are few CEOs whose personal story is as interesting as the biography of Jason Hsuan. Abandoned as a child in China, the Chinese government sent Jason Hsuan to a labor camp where he toiled from ages fifteen to eighteen. When he became ill from tuberculosis, Hsuan was deported to Taiwan to be with his remaining family. While that sort of hardship might crush a lesser man, Jason Hsuan used the experience to grow, learn and develop his corporate philosophy. Now, Dr. Jason Hsuan is the CEO and Chairman of TPV Technology Limited, the world’s largest manufacturer of computer monitors!
Despite having spent three years in a labor camp, which robbed him of educational opportunities and was largely dehumanizing, Jason Hsuan lifted himself up. Once in Taiwan, Hsuan began working to improve his lot in life. While he worked for six years at General Electric, he saw it as his duty to go help his father when the Taiwan Pepsi Cola branch suffered a severe economic downturn. Hsuan prioritized his family and went to work for Pepsi, serving as a Vice President of the Taiwan branch. That sense of responsibility served Jason Hsuan exceptionally well when he came to the United States to pursue his education. At Boston University, Hsuan earned his Master’s in Systems Engineering. After earning his Master’s, Jason Hsuan went to the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn where he applied his talents to getting his Ph.D. in Systems Engineering.
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Posted on
March 3rd, 2012 by
David
For companies in the technology sector, having a sense of the marketplace and the potentials of both your company and the consumers you service is essentials. This means having corporate executives who are strategic thinkers. The ideal corporate officer for the tech market must balance a sense of pragmatism and vision for multiple product releases and market scenarios. Arguably, the person most responsible for anticipating the needs of the company and executing the plans that adapt the company to changing market conditions is the head of Strategic Planning and Operations. For Autodesk, that person is Moonhie Chin.
Moonhie Chin is the Senior Vice President of Strategic Planning and Operations for Autodesk, a software company that primarily makes animation and art software. Chin is a powerful executive who has been working for Autodesk since 1989. As the Senior Vice President of Strategic Planning and Operations, Moonhie Chin is responsible for leading the team that keeps Autodesk competitive around the world. If falls to her to allocate the infrastructure of Autodesk – in materials and personnel – to determine what products the company will release and when they will be available on the market. In her role of Senior Vice President, Moonhie Chin must not only be aware of the demands on the supply chain at Autodesk to ensure they manufacture their products in a timely fashion, but the forthcoming products by competitors as well. Chin has to anticipate the consumer and corporate trends to position Autodesk for success. Given that Autodesk has been steadily growing, with increasingly more popular products, since Moonhie Chin took over as Senior Vice President of Strategic Planning and Operations, she is clearly doing the job right!
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Posted on
March 2nd, 2012 by
David
The idea of play is an ancient one, so it is a pretty ambitious goal to reinvent the wheel on toys. In fact, given the billions of dollars that are spent each year producing, developing, transporting and marketing toys, the idea of trying to completely reinvent the marketplace is an audacious one. When the casual concept for such an idea turns into a viable business unexpectedly, sometimes the innovators themselves are surprised. That is exactly what happened with Outfit 7 and Samo Login.
Samo Login is the Founder and CEO of Outfit 7, a Slovenian mobile app company. Outfit 7 is best known for the Talking Tom application, an animated cat that you upload to your smartphone. The cat repeats phrases you say to it and interacts in a limited digital environment. Samo Login’s concept for the figure was to create a toy for mobile phone users. With more than two hundred million Talking Tom apps downloaded, Samo Login’s concept seems to have truly taken off!
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