Technological rockstars who raise the bar on innovation.
Adam Bosworth
VP, Engineering, Google
Adam Bosworth is currently running Google Health. He joined Google from BEA, where he was Chief Architect and Senior VP of Advanced Development, responsible for driving the engineering efforts for BEA's Framework Division.
Prior to BEA, Adam co-founded Crossgain, a software development firm acquired by BEA. Known as one of the pioneers of XML, Adam held various senior management positions at Microsoft, including General Manager of the WebData group, a team focused on defining and driving XML strategy. While at Microsoft, he was responsible for designing and delivering the Microsoft Access PC Database product and assembling and driving the team that developed Internet Explorer 4.0's HTML engine. Prior to Microsoft, Adam designed and built Quattro for Borland.
Adam received his BA from Harvard University.
Marty Abbott
Former CTO & SVP, Technology, eBay
Marty Abbott is a technology and business executive with experience in Fortune 500 and internet startup companies. Marty was formerly the COO of Quigo, an advertising technology startup. Prior to that, he spent nearly six years at eBay as VP of Operations, VP of Operations and IT, and finally CTO and SVP of Technology. Prior to eBay, Marty held domestic and international executive and management positions at Gateway, managing both the IT software development and IT Operations groups in the US and Asia Pacific regions. Marty also held several manufacturing and engineering management roles in Motorola’s Land Mobile Product Sector. He served in the US Army for 12 years.
Marty has an MS in Computer Engineering from the University of Florida, a BS in Computer Science from the United States Military Academy (West Point) and is a graduate of the Harvard Business School’s Executive Education Program. He is a member of the University of Florida’s Technology Commercialization Board and serves on the Board of Directors for Onforce and the advisory boards of Rearden Commerce and LiveOps.
Tom Keeven
Former VP, Infrastructure, Operations & Architecture, eBay
Tom Keeven is a veteran IT and technology executive with both Fortune 500 and startup experience. Most recently, Tom spent six years at eBay where he was VP of Infrastructure, VP of Operations and VP of Architecture. Tom oversaw all of eBay's technical operations globally, including those of its wholly owned subsidiaries such as PayPal. Tom helped grow the technical infrastructure to achieve world class availability and scalability ultimately serving billions of requests per day and was a member of eBay's Extended Executive Staff.
Prior to eBay, Tom held executive management positions in Operations and Architecture at Gateway and Gateway Country stores. He also held executive management positions in Whirlpool's Global Operations organization and has managed infrastructure and operations organizations on three continents.
Tom attended Ferris State University and serves on the technical advisory boards of Salesforce.com, Tiversa, Bix.com, LiveOps and Rearden Commerce.
Chuck Geiger
EVP, Technology, Interactive Corp, Former CTO, PayPal,
Former VP, Engineering, eBay
As the former CTO for PayPal, an eBay Company, Chuck Geiger managed a team of more than 550 employees and was responsible for the organization's engineering, architecture, operations, IT, quality assurance, project and product management, content, localization and design efforts. Prior to becoming PayPal's CTO, Chuck was eBay's Vice President of Product Development and Architecture from 2000 to 2003.
Chuck was also Vice President of E-commerce at Gateway Corporation, where he was responsible for developing, executing and successfully deploying Gateway's web-enabled electronic commerce platform. He has held several leadership positions at Travelocity, including Vice President of Product Development and Marketing, where he was responsible for directing all product development, technical development, and related product marketing for the Travelocity and easySabre products and services. Before that, Chuck oversaw development, implementation, and marketing of both an airline operations control system and the airline crew management system at Sabre. He has also held technical positions at American Airlines and Texas Instruments, Inc.
Chuck graduated with honors from University of Kansas, with BS in Computer Science.
Jon Bosak
Distinguished Engineer & Father of XML, Sun Microsystems
Jon Bosak, who organized and led the group that created XML, is now serving as the chair of the XML Coordination Group of the World Wide Web Consortium. He is also a founding member of the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards Process (OASIS) and chaired the committee that developed the OASIS process for the definition of industry-specific XML markup standards.
Jon has also served on the advisory board of the Electronic Business XML initiative (ebXML); on the solution provider board of RosettaNet, the leading XML-based supply-chain organization for the electronics industry; and on the board of governors of the Electronics Industry Data Exchange Association (EIDX). He currently chairs the OASIS Universal Business Language Technical Committee. Jon's articles can be found on his web page: www.ibiblio.org/bosak/
Dr. Robert J. Glushko
Adjunct Professor, UC Berkeley, Former Chief Scientist and XML
Evangelist, Commerce One
An information management scientist, entrepreneur, consultant, author, and educator, Bob Glushko has been a pioneer in the commercialization of XML. He spent 25 years in research and industry, and now balances his role at Rearden Commerce with work at the University of California, Berkeley, where he is an Adjunct Professor at the School of Information Management & Systems and the Director of the Center for Document Engineering.
An Engineering Fellow, XML Architect and Evangelist at CommerceOne, Robert joined the B2B e-commerce company when it acquired Veo Systems, where he was a Co-Founder, Director of Engineering, and co-inventor of three patents in document processing and Web Services. He was previously Co-Founder and Chief Scientist at Passage Systems, Founder and Principal of Hypertext Engineering, Principal Scientist at Search Technology, Manager of Technology Transition Methods at Carnegie-Mellon University's Software Engineering Institute, and a Technical Staff member at AT&T Bell Laboratories.
Robert earned a BA from Stanford University, MS in Software Engineering from the Wang Institute, and PhD in Cognitive Psychology from the University of California at San Diego. He is the author of scores of scientific papers, presenter of more than a hundred papers on document engineering and XML, and a participant in numerous international technology standards committees. Robert's book “Document Engineering: Document Analysis and Design for Business Informatics and Web Services” was published by MIT Press in early 2005.
John Seely Brown
Independent Co-Chairman, Deloitte Center for Edge Innovation,
Former Chief Scientist, Xerox Corporation
John Seely Brown is the Independent Co-Chairman of the Deloitte Center for Edge Innovation. Prior to that he was the Chief Scientist of Xerox Corporation and the director of its Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) a position he held for nearly two decades. At PARC, Brown expanded the role of corporate research to include such topics as organizational learning, knowledge management, complex adaptive systems, and nano/mems technologies.
John serves on numerous boards (Amazon, Corning, and Varian Medical Systems) and has published over 100 papers in scientific journals. He was awarded the Harvard Business Review's 1991 McKinsey Award for his article "Research that Reinvents the Corporation" and again in 2002 for “Your Next IT Strategy.” With Paul Duguid he co-authored the acclaimed book The Social Life of Information (HBS Press, 2000), and with John Hagel he co-authored the book The Only Sustainable Edge about new forms of collaborative innovation.
JSB received a BA from Brown University in 1962 in mathematics and physics and a PhD from University of Michigan in 1970 in computer and communication sciences



