Search results
Results from the Go Local Guru Content Network
Marc Seriff. Marc S. Seriff (born May 5, 1948 in Austin, Texas) is best known as the CTO and co-founder of America Online, [1] along with Jim Kimsey (CEO), Steve Case, and William von Meister (as Control Video Corporation).
Jim Kimsey. James Verlin Kimsey (September 15, 1939 – March 1, 2016) was the co-founder of AOL. He was the first chairman of the company and its CEO until 1995. [1] Although Kimsey is best known for having helped to create AOL, he also spearheaded many other business, military and philanthropic endeavors.
Case helped build Quantum Computer Services with tech entrepreneurs Jim Kimsey and Marc Seriff. He wasn't an engineer, but rather a visionary and business strategist. In his early 20s, he read ...
On May 24, 1985, Quantum Computer Services, an online services company, was founded by Kimsey from the remnants of Control Video, with Kimsey as chief executive officer and Marc Seriff as chief technology officer. The technical team consisted of Seriff, Tom Ralston, Ray Heinrich, Steve Trus, Ken Huntsman, Janet Hunter, Dave Brown, Craig Dykstra ...
Steve Case. Stephen McConnell Case (born August 21, 1958) is an American businessman, investor, and philanthropist best known as the former chief executive officer and chairman of America Online (AOL). Case joined AOL's predecessor company, Quantum Computer Services, as a marketing vice-president in 1985, became CEO of the company (renamed AOL ...
Steve Chen. Chief Technology Officer of the Department of Health and Human Services. Chief Technology Officer of the United States. Aneesh Chopra. Uma Chowdhry. Vivian Chu. William Cook (computer scientist) Danese Cooper. Dean Corren.
ALAMEDA, CA — The Alameda County Sheriff's Office is advising Alameda residents and others throughout the county that local residents are receiving calls from scammers claiming to be from ...
Eleanora Colloredo-Mannsfeld. William F. von Meister (February 21, 1942 – May 18, 1995) was an American entrepreneur who founded and participated in a number of startup ventures in the Washington, D.C., area. These included The Source, an early online service and CompuServe competitor, and Control Video Corporation, a predecessor to AOL.