Saturday, May 19, 2012

Googles 2010 I/O Developer Conference Sold Out Registration Closed

March 5, 2010 by Will  
Filed under Google News

The search Engine Giant has announced that over 4000 developers have snatched up all the available spots for Google's Largest Developer Event of the Year.

Google I/O brings together thousands of developers for two days of deep technical content, focused on building the next generation of web, mobile, and enterprise applications with Google and open web technologies such as Android, Google Chrome, Google APIs, Google Web Toolkit, App Engine, and more

"This year's Google I/O conference has sold out and registration is closed. That means more than 4,000 developers will be joining us on May 19-20 at Moscone West in San Francisco."

Google I/O will feature over 80 sessions featuring highly technical, in-depth content covering a number of technologies and developer products. New speakers and workshops are being added as the day draws closer.

The Developer Sandbox, first introduced at I/O 2009, is the demo area at Google I/O where we feature a wide range of developers who have built applications based on technologies and products featured at I/O. Representing large and small companies, individual developers, and a diverse collection of apps, these developers will be participating in the Sandbox to demo their applications, answer questions, and exchange ideas.

Google added a new event new event before the conference called I/O BootCamp. Part sessions and part hacking, BootCamp focuses on 101-level content and provides an overview of our major developer platforms. Boot Camp is being held the day before I/O so attendies can be schooled in the products before the big event.

Get more information HERE

Some of the smartest and innovative developers along with employee's will be speaking. Heres what been planned so far.

Aaron Koblin
Aaron takes social and infrastructural data and uses it to depict cultural trends and emergent patterns. He received the National Science foundation’s first place award for scientific visualization and is part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art. Currently, Aaron is part of Google’s Creative Lab in San Francisco.
Adam Graff
Adam has worked in various roles at Genentech in software development, support and management while contributing to saving the lives of patients with unmet medical needs. Adam leads a team that is implementing Google Apps for 18,000 employees. They are also delivering innovative integrations between the Google Apps platform and other critical business systems that delight users, foster collaboration and increase productivity.
Adam Nash
Adam joined LinkedIn in 2007 and has helped build a number of product & technology teams. After taking over LinkedIn platform efforts in 2009, he led the effort to launch their first open platform, developer.linkedin.com, and their full support for OAuth. He currently spends his time focused on how the next generation of business applications will leverage social platforms.
Albert Cheng
Albert is a software engineer on the iGoogle team. He currently leads the Gadget Development Tools projects. Interests include mountain climbing, enjoying free food, and fixing bugs.
Albert Wenger
Albert is a managing partner at Union Square Ventures. He currently serves on the boards of Twilio, Foursquare, 10gen, AMEE, Covestor, and Clickable. Albert has a Bachelors degree from Harvard and a PhD from MIT. He is married with three kids and lives outside New York City. Albert blogs at http://continuations.com
Alex Russell
Alex is a member of the Google Chrome Frame team and a believer in the web as a democratizing platform. Prior to his work on Google Chrome Frame, Alex was Project Lead for the Dojo Toolkit JavaScript framework.
Alfred Fuller
Alfred recently joined Google after getting his Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of California, Davis. Since joining Google's App Engine team, he has worked primarily on improving the Datastore.
Amit Manjhi
Amit is a software engineer on the Google Web Toolkit team, where he works towards GWT delivering "productivity for developers, performance for users." In particular, he has contributed to improving GWT's development mode, testability of GWT applications, and resource selection in GWT. He holds a Ph.D. degree in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University, has founded a VC-backed Web startup, and enjoys mathematical puzzles.
Amit Weinstein
Amit is a developer on the Google Chart Tools team based in Israel. The team is now working on unifying the available chart tools in Google and enhancing them. When not at work, Amit is also working on his PhD in Computer Science at Tel Aviv University.
Anders Sandholm
Anders is a Product Manager at Google. He launched the V8 JavaScript engine and Developer Tools in Google Chrome. Before coming to Google, Anders was a management consultant with McKinsey & Company. Anders holds a PhD in computer science from the University of Aarhus and an MBA from INSEAD.
Anil Sabharwal
Anil is an Enterprise Product Manager on Google Docs based in Sydney, Australia. Prior to joining Google, he was a successful serial entrepreneur and held senior product and marketing management positions at NGRAIN, Viewpoint, and Microsoft. Anil graduated from the University of Waterloo with an Honors Degree in Mathematics and Computer Science and a minor in Business Administration.
Arne Roomann-Kurrik
Arne is a Developer Programs Engineer at Google, working with the Chrome team. Just like the rest of you, he puts his pants on one leg at a time; except that once his pants are on, he makes excellent samples, developer tools, and documentation.
Bart Locanthi
Bart joined Google in 2005 and most recently has worked on MyMaps and the Maps Data API. Prior to Google, he did freelance work on embedded languages and XML app servers. In ancient times, he was at AT&T Bell Labs, where he worked on the Blit and Gnot (Plan9) terminals, CAD tools, and CS in general.
Ben Appleton
Ben is the tech lead manager for Google's Maps APIs. He is interested in randomized algorithms and computational geometry. Ben has a PhD in image analysis and degrees in electrical engineering and mathematics from the University of Queensland.
Ben Cheng
Ben is a software engineer in the Android team working on Dalvik. His primary project is to develop a JIT compiler that improves the efficiency of the VM. He also spends time developing tools for performance tuning and code verification. Before Google, Ben worked at various companies on virtual machines, including Transmeta, Azul, and PeakStream. Ben got a PhD degree in Computer Science from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Ben Collins-Sussman
Ben is a tech lead and manager for Google Code's project hosting service. He was one of the founding developers of Subversion, and later helped port it to Google's Bigtable infrastructure. He also has a degree in mathematics, plays banjo, writes musicals, and takes lots of photos.
Ben Fried
Ben is Chief Information Officer at Google and oversees Google's global technology systems. His extensive hands-on experience in technology includes stints as a dBASE II programmer, front-line support manager, Macintosh developer, Windows 1.0 programmer, and Unix systems programmer. Prior to joining Google, he spent more than 13 years in Morgan Stanley's technology department.
Bill Buzbee
Bill is a software engineer on Google's Android team, where he works on the Dalvik JIT Compiler. Prior to Google, Bill worked on dynamic compilation at Hewlett-Packard and Transmeta. He lives in Half Moon Bay with his wife, three kids and a dog.
Bob Aman
Bob works on the Developer Relations team at Google in Mountain View. He loves contributing to open source, open web standards, and generally making the web a friendlier, more useful place for everybody. Bob was once saved from a volcanic mishap by a bad case of malaria. True story.
Brad Chen
Brad manages the Native Client project at Google, where he has also worked on cluster performance analysis projects. Prior to joining Google, he was Director of the Performance Tools Lab in Intel's Software Products Division. Chen served on the faculty of Harvard University from 1994-1998, conducting research in operating systems, computer architecture and distributed systems. Dr. Chen has Bachelors and Masters degrees from Stanford University and a PhD from Carnegie Mellon University.
Brad Feld
Brad has been an early stage investor and entrepreneur for over 20 years. Prior to co-founding Foundry Group, he co-founded Mobius Venture Capital. Prior to that, he founded Intensity Ventures, a company that helped launch and operate software companies and later became a venture affiliate of the predecessor to Mobius Venture Capital. Previously, Brad served as CTO of AmeriData Technologies. AmeriData acquired Feld Technologies, a firm he founded in 1987 that specialized in custom software applications.
Brett Slatkin
Brett is the co-creator of the PubSubHubbub protocol and a Software Engineer on the Google App Engine team. He joined Google in 2005. He earned his B.S. in Computer Engineering from Columbia University in the City of New York. He lives in San Francisco.
Brian Rakowski
Brian joined Google as the company's first Associate Product Manager in 2002. He worked on Gmail through launch until 2005 when he moved to Google's Zurich office. Brian has since returned to Google headquarters and has been working on Google Chrome since the project began.
Brian W. Fitzpatrick
Brian started Google's Chicago engineering office in 2005. An open source contributor for over 10 years, Brian is the engineering manager for Google's Data Liberation Front, a member of the Apache Software Foundation, a former engineer at Apple and CollabNet, a Subversion developer, and a co-author of "Version Control with Subversion".
Brian White
Brian is a Program Manager in Google's Search Quality Engineering group. His focus is on fighting Webspam in Google's organic search across many languages. Brian has spoken at search industry conferences to help business owners and webmasters understand how their sites work with search. Prior to joining Google, Brian worked at Quote.com and Epinions.
Bruce Johnson
Bruce founded the Google Web Toolkit project and Google's engineering office in Atlanta, Georgia.
Bryan McQuade
During his time at Google, Bryan has contributed to projects that make the web faster, including Shared Dictionary Compression over HTTP, optimizing web servers to better utilize HTTP, and most recently, the Page Speed web performance tool. Prior to working on web performance, Bryan was the first full time engineer on the Google TV Ads team, where he helped to build some of Google’s TV ad auction and video management systems.
Chris Chabot
Chris is a Developer Advocate at Google, who's interested in Open Source, OpenSocial, and trying to do the impossible. Most recently he's been the driving force behind PHP Shindig, the reference OpenSocial server implementation, Partuza a popular open-source example social network site that shows how to use OpenID, OAuth and OpenSocial, and the OpenSocial PHP client libraries.
Chris Dixon
Chris is co-founder/CEO of Hunch and co-founder of Founder Collective, a $40M early-stage VC fund. Previously he was co-founder/CEO of SiteAdvisor which was acquired by McAfee. As a software developer, Chris worked on high speed trading algorithms and later on multimedia software. He is a personal investor in startups including Skype, Gerson Lerhman Group, TrialPay, Invite Media, OMGPOP, DocVerse and Knewton. He has a BA & MA from Columbia and Harvard.
Chris Messina
Chris got his start in 2004 by leading community marketing through the launch of Firefox. He is a board member of the OpenID and Open Web Foundations and plays an instrumental role in advancing OAuth and safer online computing. In 2008, Chris received the Google Open Source Award recognizing his community work on initiatives like microformats. He also co-founded the coworking and BarCamp communities and introduced hashtags on Twitter.
Chris Nesladek
Chris is a lead interaction designer on the Android project, with a focus on social. His work can be seen across the platform with the Quick Contact widget as well as the Contacts, Facebook and Twitter applications. Prior to Android, Chris worked on projects with Danger, Intuit, and Sony Design Center. In addition to staying in shape through tennis and triathlon-related sports, Chris is an avid pizza aficionado.
Chris Pruett
Chris works from Google's Japan office to support local Android application development. Prior to joining the Android team he worked as an engineer on Lively, Google's 3D online world. Chris worked for several years at a subsidiary of Activision, Inc developing video games. In his free time Chris enjoys dissecting horror games. Read about his research at http://www.dreamdawn.com/sh.
Dan Peterson
Dan is a Product Manager on Google Wave and President of the OpenSocial Foundation. Previously, Dan led the Google Web Toolkit (GWT) team as it became an open source project and worked on Google's infrastructure team on web search and data center management. Dan earned a B.S. in Computer Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, as well as minors in Technology & Management and philosophy.
Daniel Lee
Daniel joined the Developer Relations team at Google over 3 years ago. He dedicated most of his time supporting and building up the community around the Google Gadgets API for iGoogle. After spending over two years on the product, he shifted focus onto supporting the Google Maps APIs.
Daniel Raffel

Daniel is a Product Manager at Yahoo! on the Open Strategy team. He launched Yahoo! Pipes and Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. Previously, he worked at Songbird, ABC News Online, and CondeNet. Earlier in his career his passion for food led him to pursue a culinary degree which culminated in a stint as a chef in the kitchen of Thomas Keller’s NYC restaurant per se. Daniel received a Masters from the Interactive Telecommunications Program at NYU.
Dave Day
Dave works in the Sydney office as the Tech Lead of the Maps Javascript API v2, as well as Maps Labs. Before joining Google, Dave studied electrical engineering and computer science at Sydney University and worked in the power industry on simulation and database software.
Dave McClure
Dave likes to hang out with entrepreneurs, and occasionally help or invest in their startups if they let him. Dave has been geeking out in Silicon Valley for over twenty years, and has worked with companies such as PayPal, Mint, Founders Fund, Facebook, LinkedIn, SlideShare, Twilio, Simply Hired, O'Reilly Media, Intel, & Microsoft. Dave also likes to play ultimate frisbee when his knees don't hurt.
Dave Sparks
Dave is the technical lead for the Android media framework. He was the principle author of the MMA's Downloadable Sounds specification (DLS) now part of the MPEG-4 and 3GPP standards.
David Byttow
David has been a software engineer for 8 years and is currently working on Google Wave out of Mountain View, CA where he has focused his efforts primarily on Google Wave APIs. Prior to joining Google in 2008, David developed video games for popular gaming consoles and has since hung up his C++ hat to embrace all sorts of newfangled languages and technologies.
David Glazer
David is an Engineering Director at Google where he leads the Developer Platforms team and is responsible for Google's developer-facing APIs, tools, and hosting offerings. He is active in Google's ongoing contributions to the social web, including being on the board of the OpenSocial Foundation. Prior to Google, David was a founder of Eloquent (later acquired by Open Text) and Verity.
DeWitt Clinton
DeWitt is a technical lead on Google's developer team, focused on building product APIs, growing the developer ecosystem, and defending the open web. Previously, DeWitt held engineering and product management roles at Amazon, Travelocity, Microsoft, several successful early Internet ventures, and several not-quite-as-successful Internet adventures. DeWitt holds a BA in Computer Science and Political Science from Williams College. He enjoys each and every day.
Dick Costolo
Dick is the COO of Twitter, Inc. Prior to Twitter, he worked in the Ads product group at Google. Dick was co-founder and CEO of FeedBurner, which was acquired by Google in June 2007.
Don Dodge
Don is a Developer Advocate focusing on helping developers work with Google Apps. Don recently joined Google after 5 years as a developer evangelist at Microsoft. Don is a veteran of five start-ups including Forte Software, AltaVista, Napster, Bowstreet, and Groove Networks and has been in the software business for more than 25 years. Don spent 5 years at Microsoft working with VCs and start-ups in the greater Boston area.
Don Schwarz
Don is a software engineer in Google's Chicago engineering office. He has worked on a number of projects including Google Mashup Editor and most recently as one of the co-creators of Google App Engine for Java. Prior to joining Google, Don wrote distributed systems for a large financial institution.
Douwe Osinga
Douwe is the technical lead for the Google Wave APIs. After studying Computer Science and Philosophy at the Free University in Amsterdam, Douwe started various companies with widely differing amounts of success. After becoming bored with talking to customers, he joined Google in 2004, working on Search Quality, Google Trends, and on SMS Channels in India.
Dylan Lorimer
Dylan is a product manager at Google where he oversees development for Enterprise Earth and Maps. He sits at the confluence of the consumer cartographer and the the enterprise GIS user and is responsible for ensuring that Google's enterprise versions of its popular mapping applications evolve to meet the business needs of the enterprise.
Eric Bidelman
Eric is an engineer and developer advocate at Google. He works on the Google Data APIs, primarily on the Google Documents List, Google Health, and the Authentication APIs. Prior to Google, Eric worked as a software engineer at the University of Michigan where he designed rich web applications and APIs for the university's 19 libraries. Eric holds a B.S.E in Computer Engineering and a B.S.E in Electrical Engineering from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Erik Kay
Erik is an engineer on the Google Chrome team. He's currently a lead on the extensions project and also designed Chrome's autoupdate system.
Evan Roseman
Evan joined Google in 2005 and is a software engineer in Google's Search Quality Team. His primary focus is on Webspam in Google's search index. Prior to joining Google, Evan studied Computer Science at Rice University.
Evin Levey
Evin is a Product Manager on the Google Apps team, managing the Docs Platform and Google Apps Script. Before joining Google three years ago, he spent more than eight years at a video game middleware startup, working variously as coder, manager and salesman, focused exclusively on the developer community. Evin has a Masters in Computer Science from Trinity College, Dublin.
German Bauer
German joined Google in 2006, working on the Android mobile operating system UI on both interaction and visual design. Before Google, he worked at Adobe, Apple, Claris, Netscape and Motorola on mobile and desktop products. German has a background in Industrial Design working in medical and consumer areas.
Greg D'alesandre
Greg is a Product Manager on Google Wave based in Sydney, Australia. Before heading down under he was a PM for Google Sites and Google Groups. Pre-Google Greg worked at a variety of start-ups in a variety of roles, most recently as a Product Manager for JotSpot leading up to the Google Acquisition. Eons ago, when the sun was still young, Greg received his ScB and ScM in Electrical Engineering from Brown University.
Greg Grothaus
Greg is a Staff Software Engineer who joined Google's Search Quality team in 2005, where he is responsible for maintaining the quality of the search results in Google's search index. Prior to Google, he studied Computer Science with an interest in Bioinformatics at Virginia Tech.
Guido van Rossum
Guido is the creator of the Python programming language. He joined Google in 2005. In 2007 he joined the Google App Engine team, where he has been working on Python language support, API design, UI programming, the Admin Console, and developer tools.
Ian Fette
Ian joined the Google Chrome team as a product manager in 2007, focused on security, browser infrastructure, and the team's implementation and development of new web standards. Prior to joining Google, Ian worked for the U.S. Government. Ian has degrees in Computer Science from the University of Michigan and Carnegie Mellon University.
Ian Taylor
Ian works on the Go compiler. He is the primary author of the gold linker and (years ago) Taylor UUCP, and has worked on a number of other free software projects.
Jaime Yap
Jaime is a software engineer on the Google Speed Tracer team. He is a contributor to the Google Web Toolkit project, and loves expanding the boundaries for what can be accomplished in the browser. Jaime earned his Masters degree in Computer Science from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 2007, and has been with Google since 2008. He currently resides in Atlanta and enjoys long walks on the beach.
Jeff Clavier
Jeff is the Founder and Managing Partner of SoftTech VC, one of the most active seed stage investors in Web 2.0 startups. Since 2004, Jeff has invested in more than 60 consumer Internet companies in areas like social media, communities, search, gaming or consumer infrastructure, almost exclusively in Silicon Valley.
Jeffrey Posnick
Jeff is a member of Google's Developer Relations team. He currently helps developers navigate the ins and outs of the YouTube APIs. Based in New York City, Jeff is happy to be making his first trip out to Google I/O in San Francisco.
Jez Fletcher
Jez joined Google in 2008 after deciding academia wasn't the thrill-ride he'd expected. Since joining Google, Jez has worked on just about everything in the Google Geo APIs spectrum, including the v2 and v3 JS API, the Maps API for Flash and the Static Map API.
Jochen Bekmann
Jochen is Tech Lead for federation on Google Wave. Prior to that, he worked on concurrency control and the wave server and on Google Maps at some point. He worked on TCP/IP at Microsoft and was part of a few start-ups before that. The dazzling allure of academia didn't entirely pass him by (PhD(UNSW), BScHons,BCom(UCT)).
Joel Webber
Joel is a software engineer at Google and the co-creator of the Google Web Toolkit. Before working at Google, Joel spent his time banging bits and building cross-platform UI frameworks for mobile devices at AppForge. Still earlier, he was a game engine developer, but oddly enough finds working at Google to be more fun than writing games.
John Panzer
John hacks social software, standards, and products. He has participated in the Atom, AtomPub, OpenID, OAuth, OpenSocial, and Salmon standards efforts. He has helped to launch groups and blogging products at AOL and most recently managed Blogger. He is now working on open standards for the Social Web.
John Zeratsky
John is a senior designer at YouTube. Prior to that he was a user experience lead at Google, focused on the company's suite of advertising products for agencies. From 2005 through 2007, he helped create FeedBurner, which was acquired by Google in June 2007.
Justin Mattson
Justin is a Developer Advocate at Google. For the past year he has devoted his time to Android. Before that he spent time on some of Google's ads products. He has a strong interest in operating system architectures, macro economics, and advanced armchair physics.
Kathrin Probst
Kathrin is a software engineer on the Google Web Toolkit team. Most recently, she has worked on making Ajax applications crawlable, and is now contributing to the next generation of the Google Plugin for Eclipse. Kathrin earned her Ph.D. in Computer Science in 2005, and has been with Google since 2008. She lives in Atlanta with her family, which she loves because she gets to spend lots of time outside.
Kelly Norton
Kelly writes software for Google and enjoys working in the gooey area between humans and technology. He has a range of quirky experience from network hardware to graphic design and is a contributor to the Google Web Toolkit project. Kelly is the proud owner of two degrees both with ornate lettering, the first in electrical engineering from Georgia Tech and the second from the MIT Media Lab.
Kuan Yong
Kuan is the Product Manager for the YouTube developer platform. Prior to working on the YouTube APIs, he worked on enterprise video hosting, mobile syndication and monetization, launching Google Video for business and AdSense for mobile content. Kuan loves his iPhone and writes iPhone apps in his spare time.
Linus Upson
Linus joined Google in 2005 and is currently a vice president of engineering overseeing Google's browser products including Chrome and Chrome OS.
Mano Marks
Mano joined Google's Geo API team in 2006. He helps large companies, small startups, and international aid organizations all over the world develop and deploy their content in KML and Google Maps. Before Google, Mano had an eclectic career that involved getting a Masters in History, a Masters in Information Management and Systems, and working as a data manager in small and mid-sized organizations for over a decade.
Marc Ridey
Marc is a Software Engineer working on Google Maps JavaScript API v3. His focus for the past year has been on mobile and performance. Marc graduated as a Computer Engineer in France before moving to Australia. Before joining Google, Marc worked as a Senior Consultant on Microsoft .NET and SQL Technologies.
Marcelo Camelo
Marcelo is a software engineer with Google Australia, where he works in the Maps API team, with a focus on latency and mobile. Previously, Marcelo worked developing massively multiplayer games and data visualization software. Marcelo holds a B.Eng. in Metallurgical Engineering and a Masters in Industrial Engineering.
Matt Cutts
Matt is the head of the webspam team at Google where he specializes in search engine optimization (SEO) issues. He is known in the webmaster and SEO community for applying Google's Quality Guidelines. Matt sometimes discusses search issues and offers advice on website visibility in Google on his personal blog at http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/ . You can also catch him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/mattcutts
Matt Holleran
Matt is a Venture Partner at Emergence. He is an expert in cloud application business models and cloud ecosystems. Prior to joining the firm, Matt's team started and built the AppExchange and Force.com partner network at salesforce.com. He advises cloud platform companies and consults with companies on whether and how to work with them. He is a frequent speaker at cloud computing events.
Matt Mastracci
Matt is a founder and CTO of DotSpots. He is currently leading the efforts to build better ways to allow users to attach images, videos and blog posts to the news in real-time using a platform based on Google Web Toolkit. Prior to DotSpots, he worked on building rich, scalable, browser-based applications for the energy sector and micropayments.
Matt Shobe
Matt is a staff user experience designer at Google whose work centers on services for publishers. Prior to Google, Matt was a co-founder of FeedBurner and led user experience design efforts there and on two prior startups with the same team. Matt is an avid distance runner, private pilot, and skier, though no such triathlon exists (yet).
Matthew Blain
Matthew is a software engineer on the Google App Engine team working on tools. Prior to joining App Engine, he worked on Google Toolbar. Prior to Google, Matthew had stints as a software consultant and as a developer on Microsoft Internet Explorer and InfoPath.
Matthew Holden
Matthew is a Product Manager for the Google Maps Data API, Google Earth vector layers, and global problem reporting on Google Maps. He joined Google in 2008, and recently helped launch spatial + attribute search in the Maps Data API. The Maps Data API provides scalable hosting and searching of geographic content in Google's cloud.
Matthew Papakipos
Matthew is an Engineering Director at Google, where he runs the Chrome OS and Chrome Graphics efforts. Prior to working at Google, he was the CTO of PeakStream and Architecture Director at NVIDIA. His interests include computer hardware and software, interactive computer graphics, and games. He has over forty awarded patents in processor design and software architecture. He received his BS in Mathematics and Computer Science from Brown University.
Max Ross
Max is a test-driven Software Engineer on the App Engine team. He works on the datastore and the Java runtime and founded Hibernate Shards in his 20% time. Prior to joining Google he was a software engineer in the supply chain management and travel technology industries.
Michael Evanoff
Mike is a Google Earth sales engineer. He is a retired Navy commander, and prior to joining Google, spent a few years in the Intellegence Community building their Google Earth globes using the Keyhole and then Google Earth Enterprise software. Since joining Google, Mike has done extensive work with Federal, DoD, Intel, state and foreign customers performing installs, training users and training partners.
Michael Fink
Michael joined Google Research in 2005, where he started the “mass personalization” effort. Since then, Michael Fink initiated several media-based projects, including YouTube's Interactive Video Annotations, which enables embedding of hyperlinks onto objects in YouTube videos. When he's not at work, you'll probably find him scuba diving in the Red Sea.
Mihai Ionescu
Since starting at Google in 2003, Mihai has worked on Google Desktop, O3D and Chrome. Lately, he is focusing on HTML5 and particularly on Chrome as a developer platform for rich web applications. Prior to Google, Mihai worked at Microsoft on Internet Explorer, Java VM, and .NET. He holds an MBA from the Berkeley Haas School of Business and an MS in Computer Science from UC Santa Barbara.
Mike Jones
Mike works in the Maps Developer Platform team in Sydney, Australia, and is the technical lead for Google's Maps API for Flash. Prior to Google, he worked as a virtual reality researcher. Mike has a background in medical imaging.
Mike O'Brien
Mike manages Appirio's growing enterprise Google business. He has responsibility for sales and delivery of Appirio's Google customers with a focus on large global enterprise implementations. He brings over 15 years of experience leading large enterprise software deployments that involve complex business requirements for global businesses.
Nathan Naze
Nathan is a software engineer at Google. He works on user interface for Google Books, one of many projects using Closure Library. Open sourcing Closure Library was his 20% project with Daniel Nadasi. He joined Google in 2005 after graduating from the University of Wisconsin with majors in computer science, political science, and economics. He lives in San Francisco.
Nick Johnson
Nick is a Developer Programs Engineer on the App Engine team. He spends his days helping people write code for App Engine. His nights are spent writing code about App Engine and then blogging about it.
Pamela Fox
Pamela has worked in the Developer Relations group at Google for the last 3 years. She spent 3 years supporting the Maps API community, and now is focusing her time on helping the blossoming Wave APIs community. In her free time, she likes to play around with any one of Google's 60+ APIs.
Paul Graham
Paul is a partner at Y Combinator and the author of On Lisp (1993), ANSI Common Lisp (1995), and Hackers & Painters (2004). In 1995, he and Robert Morris started Viaweb, the first ASP, which in 1998 became Yahoo! Store. In 2002 he discovered a simple spam filtering algorithm that inspired the current generation of filters. He has an AB from Cornell and a PhD in Computer Science from Harvard.
Peter Birch
Peter joined Google in 2006 as Product Manager for Google Earth, Google's 3D earth visualization tool that combines the power of Google Search with satellite imagery, maps, terrain and 3D buildings. He is responsible for the direction, growth, and success of the Google Earth product family including Google Earth Free, Pro, and Enterprise, the Google Earth API and browser plug-in, and Google Earth for the iPhone.
Ray Cromwell
Ray is CTO and co-founder of Timefire where he dreams of flying over vast historical data landscapes. These days, he works on visualization software using Google Web Toolkit. Prior to Timefire, he led Oracle's efforts to build mobile XForms implementations and draft IETF standards for push email.
Ray Ryan
Ray is part of the Google Web Toolkit team, and has been goading people into writing software the way he thinks they should since the 1980s. He has worked at Lighthouse Design, Sun, AOL, and has spent the last four years at Google. Recently he had a strong hand in shaping the architecture of the new GWT-based user interface for AdWords.
Reto Meier
Reto is a Developer Advocate for Android at Google and is the author of 'Professional Android 2 Application Development'. As the EMEA Android Advocate he works closely with Android developers, helping them make the most of the platform to bring rich, compelling apps to the Android Market. Before Google he worked in various industries, including offshore oil and gas while in Australia and the London finance market.
Richard Fulcher
Richard Fulcher is a senior user interface designer on the Android team, focused on communication applications. Prior to joining Google, he designed consumer experiences for TiVo, Sirius, Dell and AOL. He freely admits to playing lots of board games.
Richard Rabbat
Richard is a product manager at Google. He recently released Page Speed, a Firefox add-on that analyzes web pages and gives suggestions on how to improve them in addition to doing some of the optimizations itself. Richard manages the Google program to make the web faster and works on projects that power Google’s infrastructure including latency measurements for Google apps.
Rob Pike
Rob works on distributed systems, programming languages, and software development tools. Before Google, Rob was at Bell Labs Research. He was an architect of the Plan 9 and Inferno operating systems and is the co-author with Brian Kernighan of The Unix Programming Environment and The Practice of Programming.
Romain Guy
Romain is a software engineer at Google. After spending years having fun with large UIs on the desktop and talking about them at conferences, in blogs, magazines and books, Romain decided to go for the small screen and joined the Android project, an Open Source operating system for mobile phones. He’s now trying to make mobile phone UIs as fun and exciting as desktop ones.
Russ Cox
Russ is a software engineer working on the Go team. Before working on Go, Russ led the creation of Code Search, Google's only regular expression-based search engine.
Ryan Barrett
Ryan is an App Engine co-founder and systems engineer who got sidetracked into making web apps scale. Before App Engine, Ryan worked on transaction processing, database sharding, grid computing, and open source. Outside of work, Ryan wins Nobel Prizes, cures cancer, and recently achieved nirvana. (That was on Tuesday.)
Ryan Boyd
Ryan is a developer advocate at Google focused on enabling developers to extend Google Apps and build businesses on top of Google technology. He previously worked on OpenSocial, Google Friend Connect and Google's AtomPub APIs. Prior to joining Google, Ryan worked in higher education as a web architect for RIT's web hosting environment and as web app developer.
Ryan Sarver
Ryan is currently the Director of Platform at Twitter where he works with developers building myriad of experiences on top of 140 characters. Previously he was the Director of Consumer Products at Skyhook Wireless where he led product initiatives that leveraged the WPS platform in consumer applications and experiences. Ryan was also one of the founding members of the W3C Geolocation API Working Group.
Scott Lininger
Scott is an engineer on the SketchUp and 3DWarehouse teams. His background is in graphic design and illustration.
Scott McMullan
Scott is a Senior Enterprise Program Manager focused on helping 3rd parties grow their business with Google Apps. A startup guy at heart, Scott joined Google from JotSpot, where he ran developer programs, and previously founded Inovie Software, maker of early Internet collaboration service TeamCenter. Scott holds bachelor's and master's degrees in computer science from UCSD and was a PhD student at the university's Computer Systems Lab.
Shih-chia Cheng
Shih-Chia is a software engineer of JAPAC iGoogle team. Prior to iGoogle, he worked on Google Maps. Shih-Chia has a Masters degree from Stanford University. His interests include social dance, games, and Chinese chess.
Susannah Raub
Susannah is the tech lead for the Maps API v3 team in Sydney, focused on latency and mobile. Prior to moving to Australia, she worked on Local Search in New York and Google Desktop in Mountain View. She earned her bachelors in Mathematics-Computer Science at Brown University.
Thatcher Ulrich
Thatcher is a founding member of the Google Earth API and Browser Plugin team. Prior to joining Google he worked on games and graphics at Oddworld Inhabitants and a variety of startups.
Thor Mitchell
Thor is a Product Manager for the Google Maps Developer Platform, based in Sydney, Australia. Although originally from the U.K., he does not have a strong preference between Marmite and Vegemite, despising both equally.
Timothy Jordan
Timothy is a Developer Advocate at Google for Friend Connect. He also teaches New Media at the Academy of Art University, and announces Roller Derby. As an engineer he enjoys solving problems for the benefit of fellow humans. As an artist he enjoys the search for truth and beauty.
Toby Reyelts
Toby is a progenitor of App Engine for Java and a member of the Google Web Toolkit team. Toby's current areas of interest are performance (45.32us is too slow) and improving dynalangs on the JVM and App Engine for Java.
Tom Manshreck
Tom is a senior technical writer and has worked on the Maps API since 2007, where he writes and maintains the Maps API documentation set. Prior to Google, Tom was a managing editor for computer science at Prentice Hall/Pearson. He enjoys driving around the States with his cocker spaniel, Faulkner.
Vic Gundotra
Vic joined Google in 2007 as VP of Engineering, responsible for mobile applications and developer evangelism. Vic spent 15 years at Microsoft, working on products and operating systems including Windows 3.0, NT, Windows XP, and Vista. He was recognized by MIT as a "Young Innovator under 35" for his work in sparking Microsoft's change from Win32 to the .NET programming model. Vic holds two patents in the area of distributed computing and identity-based access to cloud resources.

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