2008 Speaker List
| Name | Title | Company | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Director - Product Management & Marketing, High-End & Service Provider Systems BU | Foundry Networks | ||
| Ahmed Abdelhalim is the director of product management and marketing for high-end & service provider systems at Foundry Networks. His main responsibilities include the analysis of cutting-edge technology trends, and assessing their impact on the networking infrastructure as well as the larger information systems world. As part of his role, he is also responsible for driving Foundry?s flagship networking equipment including the NetIron XMR multi-service backbone routers, NetIron MLX Metro routers, and the BigIron RX high performance switches. He brings over 15 years of experience in high-end networking and high performance computing. His main interests include large-scale networking, service convergence, QoS, Carrier Ethernet, WAN, next generation networks (NGNs), IPv6, and MPLS. | |||
Ahmed Abdelhalim spoke at the following session(s): Next Generation Data Centers: The Vision, the Value and Getting There, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 10:15 am–11:15 amHow do you get to the Next Generation Data Center? This session will examine the critical steps including how to focus on people, process, technology and facilities, how to sell the value to the business, and how to manage the transition to the next-generation data. Taking a phased approach, the next-generation data center is an evolution, not a revolution. This session will show you how to manage expectations, measure value achievements and how to identify the critical success factors. | |||
| CEO | Sabrix | ||
Steve Adams spoke at the following session(s): Leveraging Your People Assets - CEO Panel, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 3:45 pm–4:45 pmThe panel explores people related issues in driving the success of the startup. Topics to be discussed include hiring the right team, leveraging the board and what to look for in advisory boards. Think Outside the Box: The End of Standalone SaaS, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pmUntil this point, SaaS applications have been created in separate silos. However, now there are platform choices that enable mash-ups and composite applications. Learn how Web services affect application development and integration. As SaaS applications become mission critical for the enterprise, these applications need to be integrated into wide variety of applications including other online solutions or behind-the-firewall legacy applications. | |||
| Partner | Pepper Hamilton LLP | ||
| M. Peter Adler is an attorney and the President of InfoCounsel, LLC. Two years ago Peter served as the Interim Chief Information Security Officer at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Last year he fulfilled similar duties for Montgomery College in Rockville, MD. In his security and privacy practice, he assists organizations with governance and legal issues pertaining to information security and privacy compliance. This practice follows a unified approach in providing simultaneous security and privacy compliance with multiple regulatory regimes. The laws, regulations and private standards he works with include the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), the EU Data Protection Directive (including the US ?Safe Harbor? and other derogations), FDA security regulations (21 C.F.R. Part 11), the Canadian Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA), the Federal Education Records Protection Act (FERPA), the Federal Information Systems Management Act (FISMA) and the numerous state laws regarding notice of security breaches the Payment Card Industry (PCI) Data Security Standard, and ISO, NIST and FIPS security standards. He also provides legal support during e-discovery and forensics in preparation for litigation. | |||
M. Peter Adler spoke at the following session(s): G4 Legal Developments in Security and Privacy, Monday, April 28 2008, 1:30 pm–2:30 pmSecurity-related policy isn?t just Sarbanes–Oxley and PCI. This session will give you a rundown that includes: data breach disclosure laws, bills that are being reviewed by Congress and by state legislatures, precedent-setting court cases and actions by the Federal Trade Commission and other agencies. (And yes, PCI and SOX.) | |||
| Vice President of Solutions Management | Siemens | ||
| Rahul is the Vice President of Solution Management. He heads the Product & Service Management teams for the next generation products and solution offerings of Siemens Communication. Rahul brings more than 14 years of rich industry experience which is spread across 3 continents. Within NSN and Siemens prior to the JV, Rahul has had Customer Wins in the challenging & growth markets of India, Asia Pacific, Europe and North America wherein he has served in various Sales, Sales support, and Business Development functions. For last 6 years, Rahul has been leading the Solution Management teams to address the changing Telco requirements from the Technical and network economics perspectives, streamlined the solutions portfolio with Divestiture and Acquisition projects in addition to managing the Product house for strategic go to market initiatives. In his previous engagement, Rahul was heading the Broadband Access and Customer Win Teams for AT&T & Verizon. | |||
Rahul Aggarwal spoke at the following session(s): SIP Status Update, Thursday, May 1 2008, 9:00 am–10:00 amThe Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) remains the central standard in VoIP and Unified Communications networks. But work is still going on to bring SIP-based networks to parity with legacy TDM systems in terms of feature/functionality. Will SIP ever support the full 500-feature set that characterized the TDM systems ? and does it even need to? This session will help you understand how to evaluate whether a SIP-based IP Telephony gives your end users the functionality they need; whether it will interoperate with IPT elements from other vendors; and what your strategy should be for building an IPT system from SIP-based piece parts. | |||
| Vice President, Strategic Marketing | Meru Networks | ||
| Rachna Ahlawat is the vice president of strategic marketing and a key member of Meru Networks? executive team. A seasoned executive with over 15 years of networking and telecommunications experience, Ms. Ahlawat is responsible for overseeing the company?s communication efforts, development of new strategic markets across the globe, and guiding the product direction for Meru?s industry-leading wireless LAN (WLAN) system. Prior to joining Meru, Ms. Ahlawat was the lead analyst for Wireless LAN at Gartner, Inc. During her tenure with Gartner, Ms. Ahlawat focused on wired and wireless networking technologies, wireless security, management, voice over WLAN and fixed and mobile convergence (FMC). At Gartner, Ms. Ahlawat advised a number of networking vendors on their go-to-market strategies and helped enterprises make decisions on their networking environment. Among other positions held, Ahlawat led market strategy and research activities for various telecommunications vendors at AC Nielsen?s in New Delhi, India. Ms. Ahlawat holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Fergusson College, Pune, India with an emphasis in Computer Science, and a Master of Business degree in Marketing from Institute of Management, Development and Research (IMDR), Pune, India. | |||
Rachna Ahlawat spoke at the following session(s): Wireless LANs: Wi-Fi Update , Thursday, May 1 2008, 10:15 am–11:15 amWith the availability of products based on the Wi-Fi Alliance?s interim Draft 2.0 specification, the last barrier to enterprise adoption of wireless LANs has fallen. Or has it? With a continuing stream of advances in both technology and products, as well new and increasing application demands, it?s critical to stay up-to-date on the status of Wi-Fi and plan for innovations. This session will cover the latest advances in the IEEE 802.11 standard, as well as what?s next in the evolution of wireless LANs. | |||
| Vice President, Development | Kaazing | ||
| Brian is a Vice President of Research and Development at Kaazing, a leading developer or real-time web solutions and applications. Prior to Kaazing, Brian developed and managed user interface technology projects at Oracle which spanned their product line for nearly ten years. Brian has presented at conferences such as JavaOne, Ajaxworld, and DEMO.com, and has authored articles detailing his work in web technologies. | |||
Brian Albers spoke at the following session(s): Cloud Computing: Delivering Computing Power On Demand , Wednesday, April 30 2008, 3:45 pm–4:45 pmToday?s startup can build an entire application without touching a server. On-demand computing offerings from Amazon and others let cost-conscious entrepreneurs pay for their applications as they are needed. And it?s not just Amazon: eBay, Salesforce, Facebook and others all offer platforms atop which developers can code. Building on-demand applications poses unique challenges, from design and staging to scaling and monitoring. This session?s panelists, who?ve all built applications in the cloud, will share what they have learned, what mistakes to avoid, and how the world gets better when you stop thinking about your servers. | |||
| Director of Schneider Electric Critical Power and Cooling Services | APC, A Schneider Electric Company | ||
Domenic Alcaro spoke at the following session(s): The "Greening" of the Data Center - Sponsored by APC, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 12:15 pm–1:00 pmData centers are viewed as "not green" because they appear to be unnecessarily consuming energy, water, and other resources. There are many actions to reverse the trend of the rapidly growing consumption of energy and materials in data centers. This presentation provides quantitative examples of new methods for reducing energy consumption by power and cooling systems. Maximizing Your Virtualization Payoff: There's More Than You Think - Sponsored by APC, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 10:15 am–11:00 amVirtualization can increase efficiency and reduce operating cost by eliminating low-performance or low-efficiency servers. This presentation will focus on how new power and cooling technologies and effective data center planning and design, including management systems, are saving additional electrical costs, sometimes even more than the original savings from virtualization. Deploying a Green IP Telephony Network, Thursday, May 1 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pm?Green" networks are a hot topic, and saving on power costs is a corporate mandate at many enterprises. And many aspects of an IP Telephony deployment offer unique challenges in this area. For example, many enterprises are already unaware of the powering costs for their wiring closets, and these costs are likely to increase as an enterprise is required to deploy power over Ethernet into each of its wiring closets. This session will help you locate the new power pain points that you will encounter as you roll out voice over IP ubiquitously. | |||
| VP of Product Marketing | Clarizen | ||
| Eran Aloni is responsible for product specification and ensuring that Clarizen's solutions fit market requirements. He also directs Clarizen?s marketing programs. Eran joined Clarizen from Blue Security, where he was Director of Marketing. In a short period of time, Aloni successfully created strong brand awareness, significant media coverage and recruited a large, active and dedicated community of consumers, enabling the company to fully deploy its anti-spam solution. Prior to Blue Security, Eran was a Senior Program Manager at Microsoft Labs in Israel. Before joining Microsoft he spent over five years at Comverse, where he held several senior positions, including an Associate Vice President managing the company?s Handset Clients Division. Eran Aloni holds a BSc in Computer Science and Mathematics from Tel Aviv University. | |||
Eran Aloni spoke at the following session(s): Enterprise 2.0: Case Studies , Wednesday, April 30 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pmHow are companies incorporating Enterprise 2.0 within their business environment? How is it different from the previous generation of software applications? How do Enterprise 2.0 technologies enable the extended enterprise? What are the potential challenges in deploying such technologies? This session attempts to answer these questions through case studies of successful deployments. | |||
| Director, Intelligence Analysis and Hosted Security | Secure Computing | ||
Dmitri Alperovitch spoke at the following session(s): Wednesday Morning Keynotes, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 8:30 am–10:00 amHear about the future of technology from visionary leaders. | |||
| CTO and Co-Founder | Strangeloop Networks | ||
| Kent is principal or contributing author on all of Strangeloop's pending patents. Before helping create Strangeloop, he served as CTO at IronPoint Technology. Kent also founded, Eclipse Software, a Microsoft Certified Solution Provider, that he sold to Discovery Software in 2001. In more than 20 years of professional development experience, Kent has served as architect and lead developer for successful production solutions with The Active Network, ADP, Lucent, Microsoft, and NCS. "Port View", an application Kent architected for the Port of Vancouver, was honoured as "Best Administrative System" at the 1996 Windows World Open Competition. Kent holds a bachelor of science in psychology from the University of Calgary. | |||
Kent Alstad spoke at the following session(s): The Future of Application Delivery, Thursday, May 1 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pmOver the last few years resources have been devoted to developing techniques to ensure acceptable application performance. For example, several vendors have deployed products to optimize the performance of the WAN and of servers. What can IT organizations expect to see over the next year? This session will explore some of the possibilities including topics like: is storage optimization likely to happen, and if so, will anybody care? Will functionality such as symmetric and asymmetric application acceleration merge? Should you build the network you need to support applications or can applications dynamically control the network resources they need? | |||
| CTO | Webot, Inc. | ||
Chris Amen-Kroeger spoke at the following session(s): Cloud Computing: Delivering Computing Power On Demand , Wednesday, April 30 2008, 3:45 pm–4:45 pmToday?s startup can build an entire application without touching a server. On-demand computing offerings from Amazon and others let cost-conscious entrepreneurs pay for their applications as they are needed. And it?s not just Amazon: eBay, Salesforce, Facebook and others all offer platforms atop which developers can code. Building on-demand applications poses unique challenges, from design and staging to scaling and monitoring. This session?s panelists, who?ve all built applications in the cloud, will share what they have learned, what mistakes to avoid, and how the world gets better when you stop thinking about your servers. | |||
| VP, Product Management | Cisco | ||
Sangeeta Anand spoke at the following session(s): Network Services: Which Ones and Where?, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 2:00 pm–3:15 pmThere has been so much written in the last few years about the need to focus less on network technologies and more on network provided services. However, very little has been written about what services should be offered and where those services should reside. For example, should QoS be implemented in the router or in a stand-alone device? Should policy and control be exerted as part of the LAN infrastructure or by the firewall? In this session, leading vendors will describe their vision of which services belong where and why. | |||
| Senior Vice President, Application Development | Oracle | ||
| Jesper Andersen is senior vice president of application development at Oracle where he is responsible for the overall product strategy and direction for Oracle?s business applications. He brings more than 15 years of development and technical experience to his role with the company. Prior to Oracle, Mr. Andersen was general manager and group vice president at PeopleSoft, responsible for product strategy, development, quality and customer support activities related to PeopleSoft?s core technology platforms. He has also served as executive vice president of products for Pivotal Corp. where oversaw product definition, development, marketing, quality assurance and technology vision. Before joining Pivotal, Mr. Andersen held numerous roles in Oracle?s development organization where he built and launched Oracle?s first on demand Applications. Mr. Andersen holds a master?s degree in computer science from Aalborg University in Denmark. | |||
Jesper Andersen spoke at the following session(s): Wednesday Morning Keynotes, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 8:30 am–10:00 amHear about the future of technology from visionary leaders. | |||
| CTO | 24-by-7 Service, Inc. | ||
| Hal is the Chief Technology Officer for 24-by-7 Service and brings over 20 years of experience in developing partnerships to deliver innovative Internet-based products and services. Hal architected and launched 24-by-7's SaaS offering called PBX+ (www.pbxplus.net). During a 4 month sabbatical in early 2007, Hal helped found Memorize Truth, LLC, where they successfully launched www.VerseMinder.com using gadget technology within the Mozilla Framework. Before joining 24-by-7, he worked as a Managing Director for eonBusiness Corporation where he leveraged his background in technology and e-commerce to strengthen strategic alliances and helped launch new business units such as Atlas OnePoint (recently acquired by www.microsoft.com). Mr. Anderson was also a founder of Navidec, Inc. where he led its automotive practice group, launching several highly successful e-commerce sites including DriveOff.com, the nation's first 100-percent online leasing and auto -buying Web site that has since been acquired by Microsoft (autos.msn.com). Prior to joining Navidec, Mr. Anderson led technology and change management teams at US WEST for nine years. Mr. Anderson earned a Bachelors degree from the University of Arizona in Management Information Systems and received a Masters degree from the University of Denver in Computer Information Systems. He served on the board of directors of the Denver Street School, one of a nationwide network of non-profit, fully accredited high schools for at-risk youth (www.streetschools.org). | |||
Hal Anderson spoke at the following session(s): Enterprise 2.0: Case Studies , Wednesday, April 30 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pmHow are companies incorporating Enterprise 2.0 within their business environment? How is it different from the previous generation of software applications? How do Enterprise 2.0 technologies enable the extended enterprise? What are the potential challenges in deploying such technologies? This session attempts to answer these questions through case studies of successful deployments. | |||
| VP Marketing | SchemaLogic | ||
| Lowell Anderson -- Vice President of Marketing Lowell has more than 20 years of technology product development and marketing experience in enterprise software, professional services, business development, product planning, and go-to-market strategies. At SchemaLogic, Lowell leads a strong team focused on product management, marketing strategy, and investor and analyst relations. Prior to SchemaLogic, Lowell was Vice President of Strategic Marketing for Vallent Corporation where he was responsible for overall corporate positioning. Prior to Vallent, Lowell was Vice President of Product Management and Marketing at Metawave Communications Corporation. Lowell also spent 5 years in design engineering and development in the Aerospace industry. Lowell holds a bachelor?s degree in electrical engineering from the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Indiana and an MBA from Seattle University. | |||
Lowell Anderson spoke at the following session(s): Content Management Interoperability: Access Enterprise Document Repositories Across Mixed Portal Environments - Sponsored by Microsoft and Interop Vendor Alliance, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 2:15 pm–3:00 pmInteroperability demonstrated by Meridio, Microsoft, Open Text, SchemaLogic and Vorsite software tools help improve the efficiency of your portals, connect data among different environments, and protect sensitive information; each tool builds on the functionality of the others, providing you with an integrated solution. | |||
| Chief Architect & Director of Architecture | Xcel Energy | ||
Nagesh Anupindi spoke at the following session(s): What SOA and Web 2.0 Means to the Network , Wednesday, April 30 2008, 10:15 am–11:15 amOver the last couple of years SOA and Web services has been over-hyped. Web 2.0 is beginning to be over-hyped. Because of the hype, it is easy to dismiss these application development architectures as irrelevant yet that would be a serious mistake. Both of these architectures are in the early stages of influencing how applications are developed, and applications using either are likely to run poorly and be difficult to manage. This session will detail management and performance issues associated with SOA and Web 2.0 and provide insights into what you can do to avoid them. Breaking Down the Technology and Organizational Silos, Thursday, May 1 2008, 9:00 am–10:00 amIt is widely acknowledged that the IT function is comprised of technology and process silos and that this environment needs to change. For example, focusing on application performance requires that network and security operations work closely together. The deployment of IP Telephony is causing voice and network operations to combine, and the deployment of metropolitan Ethernet is requiring LAN and WAN groups to merge. Also driving change are growing multi-function devices such as VPN/Remote Access concentrators and Internet gateways. This session will detail techniques that IT organizations have used to successfully break down the silos and will make suggestions for steps that you should take to be a silo-breaker in your organization. | |||
| VP of Business Development | Box.net | ||
Karen Appleton spoke at the following session(s): Enterprise 2.0: What it is and Why it Matters?, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 10:15 am–11:15 amWhile Web 2.0 is now considered mainstream, Enterprise 2.0 is relatively new and leverages Web 2.0 technologies in the context of business. This session provides an analyst's view of Enterprise 2.0 - what it is, how it impacts enterprise software and how vendors and IT organizations can use it. This is a must attend session for anyone who wants to get a quick overview of Enterprise 2.0. | |||
| Distinguished Technologist, Convergence Solutions | ProCurve Networking by HP | ||
| Manfred Arndt is the Convergence Solutions Architect for ProCurve Networking by HP. He is responsible for specifying and architecting IP telephony and multimedia capabilities in ProCurve?s network equipment and network management applications. He also participates within the Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA) and IEEE subcommittees, helping defining networking and telecommunications standards and is a co-author of the ANSI/TIA-1057 (LLDP-MED) standard. Arndt has more than 20 years of experience as System Architect, Technologist, Software Engineer and R&D Software Development Manager in several networking startups and the high-tech industry. Before joining ProCurve, he led the development of a pre-standard WiMAX broadband wireless access system, which included advanced QoS and scheduling algorithms to support business grade VoIP and video conferencing. At Fluke Networks, he architected and developed various network diagnostic products, including a 10/100/Gigabit integrated network analyzer that combined advanced network discovery, SNMP analysis, RMON2 monitoring and a high-performance protocol analyzer. Arndt holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Computer Engineering from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He also holds three networking patents. | |||
Manfred Arndt spoke at the following session(s): VoIP: Wired, Wireless, Everywhere, Thursday, May 1 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pmVoice over IP is clearly the winning strategy for the deployment of voice services going forward. But there are both wired and wireless solutions available, and it?s very difficult, as a consequence, to determine which alternatives make the most sense in a given case. Should we go entirely wireless? Can we construct unified wired/wireless solutions that make the most of common components and services? This session will define the current landscape and help you evaluate alternatives in setting an enterprise VoIP strategy. | |||
| VP | Siemens ommunications Inc. | ||
Al Baker spoke at the following session(s): Architectures for IP Telephony Deployment, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 10:15 am–11:15 amMarket research shows that while the vast majority of enterprises have some experience with IPT, few have deployed the technology pervasively throughout their network. This session will help you understand how to approach network-wide deployment: Whether to centralize call control as part of a larger data center consolidation; whether regional/clustered deployments offer a better resiliency option; or whether the deployment is likely to be so drawn-out that it?ll effectively preclude any coherent architectural approach. You?ll also hear the pros and cons of pure IP voice infrastructure versus a hybrid TDM-IP plan; and you?ll hear about trends in open source as well. | |||
| Chief Marketing Officer | Mformation | ||
Matt Bancroft spoke at the following session(s): Mobility at Work: Mobile Device Management, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 3:45 pm–4:45 pmSophisticated mobile platforms need correspondingly-sophisticated management. From provisioning to monitoring, management, and control, a comprehensive and effective mobile device management capability is essential to mobile success. With sensitive corporate and other information now regularly resident on highly-mobile devices, what management strategies can the enterprise apply to keep communication and data manageable and secure? And will mobile management be best addressed as an enterprise or carrier opportunity? | |||
| Associate Vice President and Head ISV Business | HCL Technologies | ||
Sukamal Banerjee spoke at the following session(s): The Art of Collaborating for Innovation: Risk-Reward Partnership, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 10:15 am–11:15 amSoftware companies operate in a competitive, fast changing market where innovation is the key for domination. Companies need to focus on their core competencies and collaborate with partners who have complementary strengths to find the right synergy. Companies are no longer looking at traditional cost-arbitrage outsourcing models but rather looking for partners to provide the innovation edge with risk-reward models. HCL and CA have entered into an industry first risk-reward partnership, where HCL owns Research, Engineering and Product Support, and CA owns sales and marketing for CA?s Threat Management business. We will review this scenario at the session. | |||
| President and CEO | Bold Vision, LLC | ||
| Mr. Bruce Barnes has over thirty-seven years of experience as a senior level officer in the technology arena, including very influential roles in Fortune 100 companies. He has received numerous industry accolades, including having been recognized by the industry press as one of this country?s most noted CIOs. He is a recognized voice at national industry events and in major industry publications. He is an ongoing advisor and retained coach for a number of successful senior level corporate leaders. Currently, Mr. Barnes is the founder and CEO of BOLD VISION®, a senior management consulting consortium comprised of ?C Level? executives, which operates as a trusted advisor and consultant to a number of noted CIOs and other I/T leaders, as well as to several large I/T product providers. Prior to this current role, Mr. Barnes served as the Vice President of I/T Strategy and Planning for the Nationwide Enterprise, a $200B international insurance and financial services company. There, he was responsible for the overall technology strategy, I/T architecture, information security, and I/T governance processes for the global enterprise. Prior to that, Mr. Barnes served as VP and Chief Information Officer for Nationwide Financial Services, a $100B international financial services company, where he oversaw all facets of technology services and operations within that publicly-held organization. Prior to that, he served as Chief Information Officer for Ohio?s largest privately owned HMO, and he also held various management positions with an international library/information services company, the Washington (DC) office of a major technology vendor, and as an officer in the United States Army. He is a co-founder for the nationally acclaimed ?CIO Solutions Gallery?? at The Ohio State University?s Fisher College of Business. He is a graduate in five sciences from The Ohio State University. | |||
Bruce Barnes spoke at the following session(s): CIO Bootcamp - Day One, Sunday, April 27 2008, 8:30 am–4:30 pmJust as your technology platform requires regularly scheduled updates so does your leadership tool kit. As the world of information technology changes, so does the skill set required to lead the IT organization of the future. Every three years a major new mode of operation (e.g., outsourcing, Software-as-a-service, grid/cloud computing, Web 2.0) requires re-thinking the work of IT. Every year a major new application area (e.g., mobility, Business Intelligence, social networking]) expands the portfolio. Every quarter a new technology advance makes something that was once impossible/too expensive possible (e.g., desktop supercomputing). Every month a law changes that requires IT resources. Every week business requirements change. Every day a new internal relationship must be managed. Every minute a customer has an issue. Every second something that breaks must be fixed. How do you keep up? Centuries of educational research and decades of experience at the world?s top business schools demonstrate that the best (and most cost effective) way to avoid making mistakes is to learn from those who made them in the first place. The CIO Posse is a group of been-there-done-that CIOs from billion dollar plus organizations who will share with you the mistakes they have made and roll-up-their-sleeves in personalized workshops to demonstrate how these lessons apply in your world. The CIO Bootcamp blends ahead-of-the-curve, relevant-to-you academic research with fresh-from-the-trenches practical know-how giving participants a fully rounded tool kit to meet the challenges of the next generation IT organization. The CIO Posse will open the kimono and share ?war stories? and lessons learned in the following critical areas: MISTAKES Alignment/Governance Change Management Compliance Emerging Technologies Human Resource Risk Strategic Planning Vendor Management MONEY Budget Processes Sourcing Work MIND SETS Mind of C-Suite Mind of Corporation Mind of Customer Changing Role of IT Relationship with ?Suits? Innovation METRICS Benchmarks Scorecards CIO Bootcamp - Day Two, Monday, April 28 2008, 8:30 am–4:30 pmJust as your technology platform requires regularly scheduled updates so too does your leadership tool kit. As the world of information technology changes, so does the skill set required to lead the IT organization of the future. Every three years a major new mode of operation [e.g., outsourcing, Software-as-a-service, grid/cloud computing, Web 2.0] requires re-thinking the work of IT. Every year a major new application area [e.g., mobility, Business Intelligence, social networking] expands the portfolio. Every quarter a new technology advance makes something that was once impossible/too expensive possible [e.g., desktop supercomputing]. Every month a law changes that requires IT resources. Every week business requirements change. Every day a new internal relationship must be managed. Every minute a customer has an issue. Every second something that breaks must be fixed. How do you keep up? Centuries of educational research and decades of experience at the world?s top business schools demonstrate unambiguously that the best [and most cost effective] way to avoid making mistakes is to learn from those who made them in the first place. The CIO Posse is a group of been-there-done-that CIOs from billion dollar plus organizations who will share with you the mistakes they have made and roll-up-their-sleeves in personalized workshops to demonstrate how these lessons apply in your world. The CIO Bootcamp blends ahead-of-the-curve, relevant to you academic research with fresh-from-the-trenches practical know-how giving participants a fully rounded tool kit to meet the challenges of the next generation IT organization. The CIO Posse will open the kimono and share ?war stories? and lessons learned in the following critical areas: MISTAKES Alignment/Governance Change Management Compliance Emerging Technologies Human Resource Risk Strategic Planning Vendor Management MONEY Budget Processes Sourcing Work MIND SETS Mind of C-Suite Mind of Corporation Mind of Customer Changing Role of IT Relationship with ?Suits? Innovation METRICS Benchmarks Scorecards | |||
| Business Development Mgr | CommScope, Inc. | ||
Mike Barnick spoke at the following session(s): Going Green in the Data Center or Going Going Gone! - Sponsored by CommScope, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 4:15 pm–5:00 pmWill you have enough energy capacity to power and cool your critical high-density equipment or will you be the one they call when the datacenter goes dark? Never fear, the industry?s energy consciousness has evolved and help is on the way. Come listen and learn who?s involved and about the bright horizon ahead. | |||
| VP Strategic Alliances | Mitel | ||
Stephen Beamish spoke at the following session(s): Ensuring Highly Available, Secure and Responsive Unified Communications Across Heterogeneous Systems and Devices - Sponsored by Microsoft and Interop Vendor Alliance, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 3:15 pm–4:00 pmLearn how Microsoft, Sun Microsystems, Foundry Networks, and Mitel, came together to solve the most common unified communications challenges. The integrated solution improves application delivery and interoperability w/ existing voice networks and the ability to leverage Office Communication Server across heterogeneous systems and devices. | |||
| Senior Engineer, Desktop Virtualization Engineering | Sun Microsystems | ||
Craig Bender spoke at the following session(s): Ensuring Highly Available, Secure and Responsive Unified Communications Across Heterogeneous Systems and Devices - Sponsored by Microsoft and Interop Vendor Alliance, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 3:15 pm–4:00 pmLearn how Microsoft, Sun Microsystems, Foundry Networks, and Mitel, came together to solve the most common unified communications challenges. The integrated solution improves application delivery and interoperability w/ existing voice networks and the ability to leverage Office Communication Server across heterogeneous systems and devices. | |||
| President | Rick Bennett Advertising | ||
| Rick Bennett is the one-man ad agency who took Oracle from $15 million to its first billion-dollar sales year. His guerrilla marketing has helped create billion-dollar companies (Oracle and Salesforce.com, to name two), along with numerous $100+-million companies in the computer hardware, database, circuit design and artificial intelligence industries. His advertising has helped trigger acquisition of his clients?Forté by Sun, Vantive by PeopleSoft, Junglee by Amazon.com, and IntraLinks by TA Indigo Holding Corporation?and his WALL STREET JOURNAL ads secured major equity investments in his clients from Hewlett-Packard and Oracle. On three occasions the WSJ ran regional ads he created for his clients free of charge, nationwide. He learned guerrilla warfare from Tony Schwartz, whose famous Daisy commercial destroyed Barry Goldwater in 1964, and with whom he worked in 1979 to pass Massachusetts' tax-limitation initiative. Mr. Bennett is also a mathematician and inventor covered early in his career by BUSINESS WEEK, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL and other publications. Mr. Bennett created Salesforce.com's frontal assault on Siebel, the most famous of which is their "I will not give my lunch money to Siebel" campaign. He sits on the Safeguard Scientifics (NYSE: SFE) advisory board and is currently engineering BIGFIX?s frontal assault against LANDesk, McAfee, Microsoft and Symantec. Quote: "If I?d written Mitt Romney's speech on his religion, he'd have the nomination locked." | |||
Rick Bennett spoke at the following session(s): Demonstrating THE SECRET of Guerrilla Warfare , Wednesday, April 30 2008, 10:45 am–11:15 amAt SW2006 Rick Bennett validated 27 Rules of Guerrilla Warfare. At SW2007 he revealed Larry Ellison?s Law. In this session, he?ll show startups The Secret of Warfare Against Overwhelming Odds. | |||
| Lead Program Manager | Microsoft Corporation | ||
| I first became involved in next generation communications with dynamicsoft in 2000, where I lead the product group that provided SIP routing network elements for many of the early networks deployed by SIP Service Providers; including Vonage, Level(3) and Sprint. After that, I was the Leader of the team that created and brought to market the Avaya?s SIP implementation in early 2004. Since joining Microsoft in May 2004 I have worked in several roles within the Office Communications Group defining our strategy around integrating Office Communications Server with external network entities. In particular, I defined and executed our strategy for the integration of the voice modality with the PSTN and PBX systems. | |||
Russell Bennett spoke at the following session(s): Architectures for IP Telephony Deployment, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 10:15 am–11:15 amMarket research shows that while the vast majority of enterprises have some experience with IPT, few have deployed the technology pervasively throughout their network. This session will help you understand how to approach network-wide deployment: Whether to centralize call control as part of a larger data center consolidation; whether regional/clustered deployments offer a better resiliency option; or whether the deployment is likely to be so drawn-out that it?ll effectively preclude any coherent architectural approach. You?ll also hear the pros and cons of pure IP voice infrastructure versus a hybrid TDM-IP plan; and you?ll hear about trends in open source as well. | |||
| Director of Engineering and Operations | Wikia | ||
| Artur Bergman, hacker and technologist at-large, is the director of engineering at Wikia, supporting its mission to compile and index the world's knowledge. He is also an enthusiastic apologist for federated identity and a board member of the OpenID Foundation. His current interests include semantic search, large scale infrastructure, open source development and federated instant messaging. Artur writes for O'Reilly Radar and regularly speaks at conferences on scaling large systems, OpenID and Open Source. | |||
Artur Bergman spoke at the following session(s): Open Source Networking: An Insanely Smart Idea?, Thursday, May 1 2008, 10:15 am–11:15 amCan a set of open source technologies and tools developed by a loosely affiliated community of developers, offered for free over the Internet, compete with proprietary products from multi-billion dollar companies in building networks? Would you be insane to try to run your business on this stuff, or insanely smart? Either way, open source is going to have a huge impact on network operations over the coming decade. This session will present a case study of a large network built and managed with open source components and tools. You will learn which components and tools others have found successful and the benefits they have received from them. | |||
| Co-founder and CEO | SelectMinds | ||
Anne Berkowitch spoke at the following session(s): The ROI for Social Networking, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pmSocial networking is a hot topic these days, mostly fueled by consumer applications such as Facebook and MySpace. Facebook alone has been catapulted to "web platform" status with thousands of 3rd party applications being built around an open API. How will businesses leverage the social networking phenomenon? Are we creating value with social networks in business or are we simply creating more distractions? | |||
| Director of Marketing Strategy | Red Hat, Inc. | ||
Joel Berman spoke at the following session(s): One for All and All for Xen: The Emerging Strength of Open Source Alternatives, Wednesday, April 30 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pmWhile VMware created and has taken the lion?s share of the x86 server virtualization market to-date, open-source-based Xen hypervisors are gaining significant momentum. Advances in XenServer in enterprise class functionality, performance and aggressive pricing, along with the acquisition of XenSource by application delivery giant Citrix and announced interoperability with Microsoft Hyper-V have changed the playing field. With the incorporation of Xen into other OS and application environments including Red Hat, Novell SUSE Linux, Oracle/VM and Sun xVM, the mainstream has taken notice and Xen-based solutions are getting a new look from the enterprise. How will these Xen-based solutions play in the enterprise, both individually and with each other? What advantages might they offer in your environment and how could they fit into your strategic plans? | |||
| Chief Environmental Strategist | Microsoft | ||
Rob Bernard spoke at the following session(s): Energy Camp, Monday, April 28 2008, 8:00 am–5:30 pmWhether you?re an end user of technology, an IT professional, a vendor of hardware, software or infrastructure solutions, or an industry observer with an interest in technology?s energy consumption, Energy Camp is for you. Energy Camp is a collaborative forum where industry stakeholders will gather together to discuss the growing impact of today?s energy costs on IT?s bottom line, and the overarching importance of energy conservation and utilizing greener IT solutions and methods. | |||
| Corporate Vice President, Corporate Development | PTC | ||
Bill Berutti spoke at the following session(s): M&A Panel, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 10:15 am–11:15 amThis panel will discuss key issues related to M&A that are top-of-mind for software company CEO/CFOs. | |||
| Founder | Security Compass | ||
| Nishchal Bhalla, the Founder of Security Compass, is a specialist in product testing, code reviews, web application testing, host and network reviews. Prior to joining Security Compass, Nish was a Principal Consultant at Foundstone, where he performed numerous security reviews (Web Application / Code ) for major software companies, online banking and trading & e-commerce sites. He also helped develop and teach the | |||
Nish Bhalla spoke at the following session(s): B4 The SDLC and Security Awareness for Application Developers, Sunday, April 27 2008, 1:30 pm–2:30 pmYou know the importance of tailoring awareness messages to each target audience, but what should you be teaching application developers about security that relates to their daily job? Learn from experienced application developers about the content and approaches that will work to impact this tough target audience. | |||
| President and Founder | Workday | ||
Aneel Bhusri spoke at the following session(s): SaaS and the Third Wave, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pmHaving already evolved through two successive waves of adoption and service delivery, SaaS is entering the Third Wave - characterized by an increased focus on mission critical business processes, customized and personalized workflows, and collaboration. Departmental and niche solutions are increasingly giving way to broader enterprise requirements - as users increasingly grasp SaaS? evolving role as a key platform to address ?core" business solutions. This presentation will highlight key market trends in SaaS, and build a scenario for how SaaS is likely to evolve over the next three to five years toward its ultimate destination - Cloud Computing. After Mr. McNee?s initial remarks, he will be joined in a fireside chat by Aneel Bhusri, President of Workday, who will share his insights and vision vis-a-vis the future of SaaS - not only from the perspective of being the co-founder of an emerging SaaS provider, but also as a former senior executive from a leading ISV, and as a venture investor. | |||
| Distinguished Engineer | EMC | ||
| David L. Black, Ph.D. is a Distinguished Engineer at EMC Corporation and has been the chair of a number of IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) Working Groups, including the IP Storage (ips) Working Group. In the latter role, he has overseen standardization of block storage over IP protocols (e.g., iSCSI, FCIP, iFCP). At EMC he contributes to technology and product strategy and serves as a consulting engineer to product groups across the company. Prior to EMC, Dr. Black performed operating systems research and development at the Research Institute of the Open Software Foundation (OSF), later part of The Open Group. Dr. Black holds an M.S. and Ph.D. in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University along with an M.A. in Mathematics from the University of Pennsylvania. He is a member of the IEEE Computer Society. | |||
David Black spoke at the following session(s): Storage and Networking in a Virtual World, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 11:30 am–12:30 pmServer and desktop virtualization return huge consolidation benefits in space, utilization, and power but how will this new architecture affect your network, storage and business continuance (BC) infrastructure? This session will explore networking, storage and business continuity (backup/recovery/disaster recovery) infrastructure issues and architectures that will complement your server and desktop virtualization efforts from the start. | |||
| SVP | Serena Software | ||
Rene Bonvanie spoke at the following session(s): RSS, Search and Enterprise Mashups: Connective Tissue for Enterprise 2.0, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 3:45 pm–4:45 pmBusiness technology is changing as users demand greater flexibility and effortless access to information when and where they want it. RSS, Search and Mash-Ups are some of the technology underpinnings that will enable the transition to 2.0 and change the future of how we work. This session explores these technologies and their profound impact on business. | |||
| Evangelist | Kaspersky Lab | ||
Tom Bowers spoke at the following session(s): Anatomy of a Malware Attack, Tuesday, April 29 2008, 2:00 pm–3:15 pmToday the threat has changed. Hackers are no longer kids trying to create a name for themselves; they?re professionals with a vast network and are capable of increa | |||

