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Subject: IP: for Valley people (Silicon that is)Steve McGeady * Lessons of Antitrust * CSL Colloquium Wednesday 4:14 Gates B03



>
> >
> >
> >       Computer Systems Laboratory Colloquium
> >         4:15PM, Wednesday, January 31, 2001
> >    NEC Auditorium, Gates Computer Science Building B03
> >
> >Topic:         Lessons of Antitrust: A Case Study
> >
> >Speaker:       Steve McGeady, Drumlin Holdings
> >
> >About the talk:
> >
> >   Anti-trust and Technology: Anecdotes from the Microsoft Trial
> >
> >Steven McGeady started and ran Intel's multimedia and Internet
> >software efforts during much of the 1990s.  During this time, he
> >worked extensively with and against Microsoft.  Having been both
> >at the front line of Intel-Microsoft relations and a packrat of
> >email, presentations, and notes, it isn't surprising that his
> >files were subpoenaed by the US Dept. of Justice for the
> >Microsoft anti-trust trial.  Perhaps more surprising was that he
> >was the only Intel executive -- indeed, one of the few PC
> >industry executives -- who actually agreed to testify, despite
> >the misgivings of his then employer, Intel.
> >
> >Mr. McGeady will give some opinions on the nature of competition
> >in the technology industry, some anecdotes about his
> >participation in the trial, and some suggestions about how to
> >think about the underlying social responsibility of competitive
> >entrepeneurs.
> >
> >About the speaker:
> >
> >Mr. McGeady is Managing Director of Drumlin Holdings, an
> >investment company and technology advisory group. Until June of
> >2000, Mr. McGeady was Vice President of Intel Corporation's New
> >Business Group. During his 15 years at Intel, Mr. McGeady led
> >many software, marketing, and investment initiatives for Intel,
> >including the i960 RISC microprocessor software, multimedia
> >research and development, Intel's Internet development group, and
> >a new business focused on Internet-based healthcare delivery.
> >Prior to working at Intel, Mr. McGeady was a software engineering
> >manager at Ann Arbor Terminals and Tektronix.
> >
> >Mr. McGeady was Vice-President of Intel's Multimedia,
> >Communications, and Internet activities from 1990 through 1996,
> >where he led the development of the first desktop
> >video-compression software for the PC, Intel's early
> >implementations of multimedia network broadcast protocols, the
> >first products to combine television and web pages, online
> >virtual communities, the Java language, and data security
> >infrastructure.
> >
> >During the 1996/97 academic year, Mr. McGeady was a visiting
> >researcher at the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of
> >Technology, were he pursued research on emergent and
> >self-organizing behavior in computer networks, and was a keynote
> >speaker at the first Harvard Conference on the Internet and
> >Society. His speech from the event, "The Digital Reformation:
> >Freedom, Risk, Responsibility" was reprinted in the Harvard
> >Journal of Law and Technology. During 1997 and 1998, Mr. McGeady
> >was a member of the National Science and Technology Board
> >committee on Information Systems Trustworthiness, and is a
> >co-author of its book on the subject.
> >
> >In 1998, Mr. McGeady was a witness for the US Department of
> >Justice in the U.S. vs. Microsoft anti-trust case, where he
> >testified about Microsoft's attempts to control Intel's software
> >efforts, as well as their behavior toward Netscape and Sun's
> >Javasoft. He was the only executive from the PC industry to
> >testify for the government.
> >
> >>From 1997 through 2000, Mr. McGeady ran Intel's Internet Health
> >Division, which focused on accelerating the deployment of
> >computing and the Internet in the healthcare industry. Through
> >industry marketing, investment, and business creation, Intel was
> >influential in the establishment of e-health as the
> >fastest-growing Internet business segment. IHD created the
> >Internet Authentication Services business, allowing secure
> >credentials for online health information transactions. Mr.
> >McGeady is now a well-known commentator on the role of technology
> >in Health.
> >
> >Mr. McGeady is on the Boards of several small companies,
> >including Webcriteria, an Internet user-experience metrics
> >company, as well as on several non-profit Boards, including the
> >Reed College Board of Trustees and Ecotrust. Mr. McGeady is also
> >a member of the International Advisory Board for the National
> >University of SIngapore's Kent Ridge Digital Lab, and a member of
> >the Technology Advisory Board for Mercy Corp, an international
> >aid organization. Mr. McGeady attended Reed College from
> >1977-1980, and studied Physics and Philosophy.
> >
> >Contact information:
> >
> >Steve McGeady
> >mcg@mcgeady.com



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