Panelists included Curt Schilling, Founder of 38 Studios; Jon Phenix of GamerDNA; Craig Alexander of Turbine, Inc.; Robert Ferrari of Sanrio Digital; Eugene Evans of Mythic Entertainment; published authors Ethan Mollick and David Edery; Doug Whatley, CEO of BreakAway Games; Bruce Roberts of BBN Technologies; Matthew Bellows of Vivox; Albert Reed, founder of Demiurge Studios; John Rizzo, CEO of Zeebo.
Mary Johnston Turner first discussed the concept in a Network World opinion piece in August, 1995, and attributed the first advocacy for the concept to the now-defunct BBN Planet, the ISP division of BBN Technologies.
He started as ARPA Principal Investigator from 1968 to 1978, and was responsible for the design and development of BBN LISP at Bolt, Beranek, and Newman.
Wavefront Technologies | ATI Technologies | HCL Technologies | United Technologies Corporation | Life Technologies | Imagination Technologies | DRS Technologies | Agilent Technologies | Active Space Technologies | Zyvex Technologies | Mellanox Technologies | Malleable Technologies | IM Flash Technologies | BBN Technologies | Bally Technologies | Akamai Technologies | VIA Technologies | Telcordia Technologies | Symbol Technologies | Renaissance Technologies | Arthur C. Clarke Institute for Modern Technologies | Allegheny Technologies | Symyx Technologies | Royal Group Technologies | Phoenix Technologies | OraSure Technologies | InVision Technologies | Hellenic Aeronautical Technologies | Coulomb Technologies | Aero Composite Technologies |
He has served as scientist for the US based company Raytheon BBN technologies.
In 1967 he joined the technology company of Bolt, Beranek and Newman, now BBN Technologies, where he helped develop the TENEX operating system including ARPANET Network Control Protocol and TELNET implementations.