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Jeremy Geelan
Jeremy Geelan is Sr. Vice-President of SYS-CON Media & Events. He is Conference Chair of the AJAXWorld Conference & Expo series, of the 3rd International Virtualization Conference & Expo and founder of Web 2.0 Journal, AJAXWorld Magazine and other major SYS-CON titles. From 2000-6, as first editorial director and then group publisher of SYS-CON Media, he was responsible for the development of all new titles and i-Technology portals for the firm, and regularly represents SYS-CON at conferences and trade shows, speaking to technology audiences both in North America and overseas. He is executive producer and presenter of "Power Panels with Jeremy Geelan" on SYS-CON.TV.

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Web Services and SOA Orchestration Acquires a New Maestro
'BPEL has the potential to make BPM easier to implement by adding the flexibility required in a world where collaboration time is measured in months not years,' Mark Taber, newly-installed CEO of Active Endpoints, Inc., told SOAWorld Magazine in an exclusive interview.
"Live By the Blog, Die By the Blog" – Sun's CEO Gives (Inadvertent) Masterclass
In true Web 2.0 style, Sun's CEO Jonathan Schwartz this week gave an inadvertent masterclass in how those who live by the blog also die by the blog, when he publicly blogged an advance heads-up that Sun is about to 'retire' its historic NASDAQ ticker symbol 'SUNW'...
"A Great Day for the Virtualization Market" As Citrix Buys XenSource For $500M
Just three years after it was founded, XenSource has gotten itself acquired for half a billion dollars by Citrix Systems Inc., demonstrating the rising value and power of virtualization.
We Have Entered the Age of RIAs, Flash, Flex...and Now Apollo
Already, even in pre-release, Adobe's Spry seemed to catch the imagination of many Web professionals wrestling with how to integrate new AJAX frameworks into existing workflows. Created with designers in mind, Spry uses regular HTML tags, CSS, and JavaScript, and ...
How Open Is 'Open'?
In order for company to describe itself as an 'open source' company, need it merely help you make the switch to open source in your company - or does it have to be one that lets users freely download, compile, and use the software in question? Where is the dividin...
Is Blogging Just the Tip of the Co-Technology Iceberg?
Gartner says that the total number of bloggers will peak during the first half of this year at around 100 million, causing John R. Patrick to ask rhetorically whether spring 2007 truly is The Peak of Blogging?
"May Every New Thing Arise" (With Apologies to Peru)
Nowhere in the preamble to the Declaration of Independence did Thomas Jefferson reference the Internet, eBay, Skype, or Flickr. But if he'd lived another 180 years, to 2006 instead of 1826, I feel certain he would at some point have said something like this...
AJAXWorld 2007 East: It's Official! Jeremy Geelan Is a Web 2.0 Turtle
Alex Haley once said it very succinctly. 'Anytime you see a turtle atop a fence post,' he once wrote, 'you know it had some help.' I was immediately reminded of Haley's remark when out of the blue at AJAXWorld Conference & Expo 2007 East where I was yesterday awar...
Is Java a "Ball and Chain"?
These are curious times just now for Java. In one and the same month, Steve Jobs stands up, and declares - referring to language support on the new Apple iPhone - 'Java's not worth building in. Nobody uses Java anymore. It's this big heavyweight ball and chain.' A...
How Open Is "Open"? – Industry Luminaries Join the Debate
In order to describe itself as an 'open source' company, need a company merely be 'a company that will help you make the switch to open source in your company' - or does it have to be one that lets users feely download, compile, and use the software in question? ...
Blogging – Corporate America's "Big Wet Kiss To Web 2.0"
The significance of blogging is not the word 'blog' whether used as a verb or a noun, but its role as a harbinger of the game-changing Web-as-platform revolution. In particular, the migration of blogging from the individual toward the enterprise...
What Does It Mean To Be a Web 2.0 Company?
AJAXWorld Conference & Expo 2007 East speaker John Eckman has been summarizing on his blog a recent digital fracas between Lawrence Lessig and Nick Carr on what it means to be a Web 2.0 company.
AJAXWorld Faculty To Present Social Tools Expert Stowe Boyd
Stowe Boyd, internationally recognized authority on social tools and their impact on business and society and editor of /Message, the blog on 'what is happening at the edge, and its impact on the center,' will be speaking at AJAXWorld Conference & Expo 2007 East...
i-Technology Heroines: IBM Fellow Emerita Frances Allen Wins Turing Award
Frances E. Allen was yesterday named the first ever woman recipient of the prestigious Turing Award. In 1989, Allen was the first woman to be named an IBM Fellow. But she is not the only 'i-Technology Heroine' - many inspired suggestions of others have been coming...
Adobe Flex at AJAXWorld Conference & Expo
As the biggest-ever i-Technology event devoted specifically to AJAX-compatible Rich Internet Application technologies, it is hardly surprising that AJAXWorld Conference 2007 had an entire track devoted to Flex.
i-Technology Viewpoint: Is Anything More Social Than Computing?
'Social Computing,' I wrote back in August 2006, 'is about to turn the Web world upside down.' Now Helge Städtler of the University of Bremen has been kind enough to quote - and amplify - my assertion.
Javaland Discusses Eckel's "Java Backlash" Analysis
When Bruce Eckel wrote 'It's clear that we can't wait for Sun to fix all of Java's problems,' he possibly hadn't reckoned that his essay would provoke a huge response the length and breadth of Javaland.
The JBoss–Fleury Era Ends: Middleware's Outspoken Bad Boy Bows Out of Red Hat
His paternity leave having developed into eternity leave, Marc Fleury is quitting Red Hat.
Where's i-Technology Headed in 2007?
At the end of each year, when SYS-CON informally polls its globe-girdling network of software developers, industry executives, commentators, investors, writers, and editors, our question is always the same: where's the industry going next year?
Who Are the Top 100 i-Technology Heroes?
What do Vannevar Bush, Doug Engelbart, Claude E. Shannon, and Konrad Zuse (to name but a few) all have in common? All were missing from the initial round-up I recently published in an attempt to nail down - by consensus - the top 100 or 150 contributors of all-tim...
Who Are The All-Time Heroes of i-Technology?
How easy/difficult is it to nail down the most significant 100 contributors to i-Technology history? No sooner had I begun my attempt to do so than developers and IT professionals Web-wide began to send in their 2c...
Steve Jobs Dismisses Java As "Heavyweight" in an Age of Lightweight Computing
These are curious times just now for Java. In one and the same month, Steve Jobs stands up, and declares - referring to language support on the new Apple iPhone - 'Java's not worth building in. Nobody uses Java anymore. It's this big heavyweight ball and chain.' A...
'The AJAX Moment' Mushrooms into the Web 2.0 Movement
Early in 2006, before the general Internet-using public was aware of what I began referring to ­in editorials, blog entries, and SYS-CON's Internet TV Webcasts ­as 'The AJAX Moment,' there was a strong sense among industry insiders that AJAX-like approaches, if no...
Which Is More Important - Saddam Hussein or Google?
The year 2006 in which YouTube became culturally ubiquitous, Flash video became the de facto Internet video standard of the Web, Microsoft beta-launched Vista, and the Wii entered our lives - was also memorable for one or two other real-world events such as the ha...
"TV Anywhere, Anytime" Gets a Boost...From Joost
Combining 'the best things about television with the social power of the Internet' is precisely what The Venice Project, which yesterday came out of stealth and announced itself as Joost, is all about.
Microsoft Snags Don Ferguson, Former IBM Chief Architect – "Father of WebSphere"
Don Ferguson, who guided IBM's strategy and architecture for SOA and Web services, and co-authored many of the initial Web service specifications, has been hired by Microsoft. He is now Microsoft Technical Fellow in Platforms and Strategy, in the Office of the CTO.
"Thin Is In" – Is AJAX the Ultimate Client-Side Technology for Web Developers?
When in October Brandon Werner made his impassioned 'Why can't Java EE be more AJAX-like?' plea, 34,526 SYS-CON.com readers read what he had to say. Cincinnati-based Werner enjoined the Java community to 'Think AJAX' - by which he meant that, unlike Java, with AJA...
'The AJAX Moment' Has Arrived – What's In It for Java?
When the fast-paced, three-day program of AJAXWorld Conference & Expo in the Santa Clara Convention Center finally ended earlier this month, with over 90 technical sessions and presentations from leading AJAX vendors like Laszlo Systems, JackBe, and Backbase as we...
'The AJAX Moment' Mushrooms into The Web 2.0 Movement
Early in 2006 there was a strong sense among industry insiders that AJAX-like approaches were a shoo-in as the new paradigm for fulfilling the software development community's dream of freedom from OS or runtime environment dependent technologies. Was the early op...
The i-Technology Deal of 2006: The Google/YouTube Deal
2006 will be remembered as the year in which YouTube became culturally ubiquitous and Flash video became the de facto video standard of the Web. As they return to work after the holidays, SYS-CON's network of stakeholders - editors and commentators, columnists and...
i-Technology Predictions for 2007: Where's It All Headed?
At the end of each year, when SYS-CON informally polls its globe-girdling network of software developers, industry executives, commentators, investors, writers, and editors, our question is always the same: where's the industry going next year?
Saddam Hussein Or Google – Which Is the More Important?
2006 - the year in which YouTube became culturally ubiquitous, Flash video became the de facto video standard of the Web, Microsoft beta-launched Vista, and the Wii entered our lives - was also memorable for one or two other, real-world events such as the hanging ...
Who Owns RSS?
On Monday it emerged that Microsoft had applied for two patents covering subscribing and discovering what it refers to as 'Web feeds' - sparking a furore in the blogosphere and elsewhere that Redmond had imperial designs on RSS users.
The "Black Sheep of Programming Languages" Turns White
In the age of AJAX, in which JavaScript has emerged as the most broadly available scripting language for Web development, Bruce Tate has been wondering whether its reputation as 'the black sheep of programming languages' isn't perhaps overdue for revision.
The Adobe Vision for 2007-8 and Beyond Is Huge
Digital content is exploding; video on the Web is booming; Web 2.0 is hurtling toward us; and Adobe believes 'engagement' is the one word that best captures its strategy and encapsulates the competitive advantage that its fast-expanding product set gives to the ...
Skype Founders' Next Move: Disrupting TV With Internet Technology
'We are in the process of launching a secure P2P streaming technology that allows content owners to bring TV-quality video and ease of use to a TV-sized audience mixed with all the wonders of the Internet,' wrote Henrik Werdelin in November, on the company blog of...
i-Technology Blog: 200 Million People Can't Be Wrong About Blogging
One of Gartner's top 10 predictions for 2007 is that the number of bloggers will level off in the first half of next year at roughly 100 million worldwide. Gartner estimates that there are more than 200M former bloggers who have ceased posting.
Annual SYS-CON "i-Technology Predictions" Poll Foretells the e-Future
The British economist E. F. Schumacher used to say, 'I cannot predict the future, but I can have my sail ready.' I recently tried in my own small way to help the international community of i-Technology professionals get their sails ready for 2007 by repeating my ...
.NET Editorial — There Is Nothing Permanent Except Change
In a cross-platform world where software giants nevertheless continue to vie with each other for developer mindshare, it is significant that only one major company has managed to synch up its release numbers with the Web 2.0 phenomenon. Microsoft is not resting on...
Is the Rise of Google the End of the Game for Everyone Else?
As I write this, the stock price of Google, Inc. just exceeded $500 for the first time in the company's still-brief (two-year) history as a public company. That gives the search colossus a market cap of $150 billion, many times in excess of its physical assets - c...

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