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BCNET & Netera proudly present this year's keynote speaker: Tony Hey, Corporate Vice President for Technical Computing, Microsoft.

Hey brings over 25 years of experience in concurrent computing to Microsoft’s efforts to deepen collaboration with top scientists and researchers.

As corporate vice president for technical computing, Tony Hey coordinates efforts across Microsoft Corp. to collaborate with the global scientific community. He is a top researcher in the field of parallel computing, and his experience in applying computing technologies to scientific research helps Microsoft work with researchers worldwide in various fields of science and engineering.

Before joining Microsoft, Hey worked as head of the School of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton, where he helped build the department into one of the pre-eminent computer science research institutions in England. Since 2001, Hey has served as director of the United Kingdom's e-Science Initiative, managing the government's efforts to provide scientists and researchers with access to key computing technologies.

Hey is a fellow of the U.K.'s Royal Academy of Engineering and has been a member of the European Union's Information Society Technology Advisory Group. He also has served on several national committees in the U.K., including committees of the U.K. Department of Trade and Industry and the Office of Science and Technology. In addition, Hey has advised countries such as China, France, Ireland and Switzerland to help them advance their scientific agenda and become more competitive in the global technology economy. Hey received the award of Commander of the Order of the British Empire honor for services to science in the 2005 U.K. New Year's Honours List.

Hey is a graduate of Oxford University, with both an undergraduate degree in physics and a doctorate in theoretical physics.

 

Dick Hardt, Founder & CEO, Sxip Identity

A pioneer in the Web and open source software community, Dick Hardt has been active in software development for nearly two decades. His most recent venture, Sxip Identity, develops simple, secure, and open Identity 2.0 solutions that enable the creation of Internet identities. Prior to Sxip, Hardt founded ActiveState in 1997. Under his leadership as CEO, ActiveState became a leader in open source programming languages and anti-spam software and was acquired by UK- based software company, Sophos in 2003. As a successful entrepreneur and technology expert, Hardt is very involved in the technology community, speaking at numerous conferences and holding a board position with the Vancouver Enterprise Forum.

 

Ted Dodds, CIO, UBC

Ted Dodds is the Associate Vice President for Information Technology (CIO) at the University of British Columbia, a position he has held since 1997. Prior to that, he held IT management positions at two Ontario universities, and in the private sector, spanning a period of over twenty years.

His current responsibilities include institutional IT strategy and operations within a highly decentralized campus environment. In that capacity, he is spearheading UBC's e-Strategy Framework, which supports learning and research through radical changes to administrative practices and the use of Internet technologies (www.e-Strategy.ubc.ca). He is responsible for the University Networking Program (UNP), a $30 million capital project to install or upgrade 20,000 high-speed connections and establish a campus-wide wireless data network by the Fall of 2003.

Mr. Dodds is currently the Chair of the Board of Directors for BCNET, British Columbia's first Internetworking society focusing on the development of advanced networks.

 

Dave Nikolejsin, CIO Province of BC

Dave Nikolejsin was appointed as B.C.’s Chief Information Officer in July 2005. He is also a member of the Board of Directors for BCNET.
From 2003 to 2005, Dave was Assistant Deputy Minister, Ministry of Management Services, responsible for the NetWork BC (Digital Divide) Initiative. This initiative was created to respond to the New Era commitment to “connect every BC community to high-speed broadband.” It remains part of Dave’s new mandate.

Before that, Dave was Executive Director, Planning and Engineering for Common IT Services from 2001-2003 and Executive Director of Network Services from 1996-2001. He was the BC Systems Corporation’s Director of Network Services from 1994 to 1996, after holding various network management positions from 1989 to 1994. Dave earlier worked as a Network Analyst providing technical support of major services with SaskTel in Regina, Saskatchewan.

Dave graduated with Honours with a Diploma in Electronic Engineering from the Saskatchewan Technical Institute in Moose Jaw, Saskatch

 
 

Stuart Kauffman, IBI Director and iCORE Chair Biocomplexity and Informatics, University of Calgary

Stuart A. Kauffman is a professor at the University of Calgary with a shared appointment between biological sciences and physics and astronomy. He is also an emeritus professor of biochemistry at the University of Pennsylvania, a MacArthur Fellow and an external professor at the Santa Fe Institute.

Originally a medical doctor, Dr. Kauffman's primary work has been as a theoretical biologist studying the origin of life and molecular organization. Thirty-five years ago, he developed the Kauffman models, which are random networks exhibiting a kind of self-organization that he terms "order for free." Dr. Kauffman was the founding general partner and chief scientific officer of The Bios Group, a company (acquired in 2003 by NuTech Solutions) that applies the science of complexity to business management problems. He is the author of The Origins of Order, Investigations, and At Home in the Universe: The Search for the Laws of Self-Organization.

 

Steve Jones, Associate Director & Head, Bioinformatics, Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre, BC Cancer Agency.

Steven Jones is Associate Director and Head of Bioinformatics at Canada’s Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre. His research involves a broad number of genomic analyses - including gene expression profiling in early stages of cancer and investigating bioinformatic approaches to determine cis-regulatory elements.

Prior to the Genome Sciences Centre, Steven Jones was part of the bioinformatics group at the Sanger Institute, Cambridge, where he worked on the C. elegans genome project. Currently, in addition to his affiliation at the GSC, Steven is the Founding Firector of the CIHR/MSFHR Strategic Training Program in Bioinformatics, as well as Director of the GenomeBC Bioinformatics Platform, and a Core member of the Canadian Bioinformatics Workshops.

 

Michelle Lamberson, Director, Office of Learning Technology, UBC

Dr. Michelle N. Lamberson is the Director of the Office of Learning Technology at UBC. This office provides campus-wide facilitation and coordination for learning technology and distance learning at UBC, and, in partnership with Faculties, is responsible for development and delivery of more than 120 distance education courses. She has 10 years experience with developing materials for use in online instruction, and eight years experience working with faculty on how to use learning technologies to support instruction. Michelle joined UBC from WebCT, where she worked for three years in a variety of roles related to training, event planning and best practice use of the system. Prior to that, she was the Faculty of Science EdTech Coordinator and geology lecturer at UBC. Michelle's discipline area is Geology, receiving her degrees from UBC (Ph.D., 1993), Penn State (M.S., 1987) and Boston University (B.A., 1981). She teaches an online course within the Earth and Ocean Sciences Department.

 

Richard Smith, Associate Professor, School of Communications, SFU

Richard Smith is an Associate Professor in, and the Associate Director of, the School of Communication at Simon Fraser University. He is also a member of the Centre for Policy Research on Science and Technology (CPROST) at SFU. Smith’s research focus is new media – as a technology, as a business, and as a factor in and outcome of social change. He has an ongoing interest in technology for education, privacy and surveillance in public spaces, online communities, and the wireless information society.

With academic training in communication and law, Dr. Smith has degrees from Carleton University (BA) and Simon Fraser University (MA and PhD). He is a member of the IEEE, the Canadian Communication Association, and the International Association for Management of Technology. He is also the publisher of the Canadian Journal of Communication (CJC-Online)

 

Jens Haeusser, Manager, IT Security Office, UBC

Jens founded the Information Security Office at the University of British Columbia in November, 2003. He has been an active member of the IT community at UBC for the past 12 years. A passionate advocate for security in a Higher Education setting, he has given a wide range of seminars, workshops, and conference presentations on a variety of IT topics, and has contributed to various articles and books on IT Security. He is a member of the joint Internet2/Educause Security Task Force, and the BCNET Applications Advisory Committee.

 

Randy Sobie, Research Scientist, Institute of Particle Physics Canada, Adjunct Professor, Department of Physics and Astronomy, UVic

Randy Sobie is a Principal Research Scientist of the Institute of Particle Physics of Canada at the University of Victoria. Besides his interest in particle physics he is actively investigating how Canadian researchers will use a computational and storage Grid to store and analyze the vast data sets from the current and future experiments. Sobie leads a team of researchers at the University of Victoria, the NRC Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics, the NRCan Pacific Forestry Centre and the NRCan Pacific Geoscience Centre who are building a large computer mass storage facility funded by CFI.

 

Dr. Dennis Salahub, Vice President Research, Univ. of Calgary

Dr. Salahub’s research interests lie in theoretical and computational chemistry, especially Density Functional Theory (DFT) and its applications in materials and biomolecular modeling.

His research group has improved Density Functional methods and software, which has helped to extend the range of applications. New improved functionals have been proposed, tested, and implemented in the code suite deMon, developed in Montreal and now in use in dozens of labs around the world. A fusion of DFT-deMon with other techniques (reaction fields, molecular dynamics, etc.) is underway. Current efforts are aimed at describing reactivity in complex environments: transition-metal catalysis, on the one hand, and enzymatic catalysis, on the other.

Dr. Salahub's overall research goal for the next decade is to develop the theoretical, computational, and conceptual expertise necessary to attain a detailed microscopic understanding of chemical reactions taking place in real, complex environments.

 
 

Dr. Richard Keeler, Associate Vice President Research, UVic


Richard K. Keeler attended McGill University where in 1976 he was awarded a BSc with honours in physics. After learning about the new Canadian particle accelerator, TRIUMF, he moved to Vancouver and worked on some of the early experiments at the new facility. He was awarded a PhD by UBC in 1981.

Dr. Keeler then joined a team of scientists at the CERN laboratory in Geneva that built and operated an experiment that discovered the W and Z bosons – particles that are responsible for the forces that power the sun and cause nuclear decay. He returned to Canada in 1983 to take a faculty position at the University of Victoria where he has continued his research at the CERN laboratory. His activities have included membership on an NSERC Grant Selection Committee, Director of the Institute of Particle Physics between 2001 and 2004, member of the International Committee on Future Accelerators, and membership of several committees at TRIUMF, most recently, the Board of Management.

In 2004, he was appointed Associate Vice President for Research at the University of Victoria where he is responsible for the Office of Research Services, regulatory committees, internal research support committees and liaison with provincial and federal granting agencies. He assists with strategic planning, policy formation and special programs.

 

Dr. Michael Blades, CFI Coordinator, UBC

Michael Blades was born in 1951 in Barrington Passage, Nova Scotia, Canada. He attended Barrington Passage Municipal High School and in 1971 obtained a diploma in Electronic Engineering Technology from the Nova Scotia Institute of Technology and worked for a brief period as an electronic technician at the Defence Research Establishment - Atlantic in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. He received his undergraduate degree at St. Marys University(Halifax) in 1975 and his PhD at the University of Alberta in 1980 under the supervision of Dr. Gary Horlick. He subsequently went to Indiana University to work as a postdoctoral research associate in the laboratory of Dr. Gary Hieftje (1980-81).

Blades is currently a prof. in the Department of Chemistry at the University of British Columbia a position he has held since 1981. His research interests are in the areas of plasma spectroscopy, in particular,the development of new plasma sources and the characterization of excitation conditions in plasmas; laser fluorescence spectroscopy.

 

Paul Thiel, Director of Advanced Information Technology, BCIT

Paul Thiel has been the director of Group for Advanced Information Technology at BCIT Technology Centre for the past 4 years. Paul has twenty five years of Middle and Senior Management experience within Research and Development for the Information and Communication Technology sector in BC. He has been an integral part of Applied Research and development activities in BC, plus Pacific Northwest, both as an employee of companies including PMC-Sierra Inc., MPR Teltech Ltd and as an independent consultant. He full filled a 3 year secondment as Senior Technology Advisor with the BC Provincial Government and is active in the BC-TIA. Many of the projects Paul has been responsible for included technology transfers, performing due diligence on technology, production interface, sourcing project funding, marketing studies and sales.

Paul is a Graduate of the SFU Executive MBA program, holds a B.Sc. in EE from U of A and is a Professional Engineer. He is a founding member of the Canadian Microelectronics Consortium and has served on many boards and advisory committees throughout his career.

 

Robert Rankin, Associate Professor, Department of Physics, U of A

Robert Rankin is a Professor with the Department of Physics at the University of Alberta. He studies the solar wind magnetosphere interactions that couple megnetohydrodynamic wave energy into the near Earth (within 10 Earth radii) space environment. ULF magnetohydrodynamic waves are associated with a variety of phenomena observed with ground based instrument arrays in Canada, and by satellites in near-Earth space orbits.

 

Rachid Ouyed, Associate Professor, Department of Physics, U of C

Dr. Rachid Ouyed is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Physics at the University of Calgary. Dr. Ouyed is the founder and head of the CAPCA (Computational Astro-Physics Calgary) group. He applies numerical methods and techniques to solve outstanding problems in physics and astrophysics. His recent research involves high performance computational investigation (using the WestGrid facilities) of the enigmatic Astrophysical Jets and Gamma Ray Bursts.

 

Brett Gladman, Associate Professor & Canada Research Chair, Department of Physics and Astronomy, UBC

Dr. Brett Gladman is an Associate Professor and a Canada Research Chair at the University of British Columbia. His research interests include the dynamics, evolution and formation of the solar system; observations of small bodies in the solar system; meteoritics; non-linear dynamics and celestial mechanics; and the impact history of the solar system. His main computational research is done on a 170-CPU Athlon/Opteron Beowulf cluster in the Planetary Sciences lab at UBC.

 

Michael Hrybyk, BCNET

Michael Hrybyk is BCNET's President and CEO. He actively oversees and manages the operations of the society and is responsible for implementing the overall mission and vision of BCNET. He has managed BCNET since 1994. He pioneered the concept of transit exchanges as a method of linking research and education networks to their local communities as well as to national and international peers.

Mr. Hrybyk has been an active member of the technology community in the U.S. and Canada and has been recognized for his efforts in helping to develop the Canadian Internet. In 2003, he received a BC Information Technology Builder Award, and in 2002 was recognized by the University Presidents’ Council for his work creating advanced networks for BC's universities. In 1997, he was named as a builder of Canada's information society by CANARIE and Prime Minister Jean Chrétien.

Mr. Hrybyk also serves on the optical regional advanced networks advisory committee for CA*net4, the next-generation Canadian high-speed research and education advanced network sponsored by CANARIE.

Mr. Hrybyk is currently on leave from the BCIT Technology Centre, where he serves as the Director of the Group for Advanced Information Technology R&D (GAIT). He secured nearly $1 million in funding from the Canadian Foundation for Innovation and the BC Knowledge Fund to establish the BCIT Internet Engineering Lab. The lab, which opened in the spring of 2001, specializes in network-performance evaluation and security conformance. GAIT also conducts research in the areas of software design, instructional multimedia, geographical information> systems, and bioinformatics. Mr. Hrybyk has 25 years of experience with Internet networks, Unix systems, and software development. He has a Master’s degree in Computer Science from Johns Hopkins University, and held the position of Manager of Computing Systems and Networks there. While at Hopkins, he helped create the first campus-wide Ethernet network in 1986, and connected it to SURANet and NSFNET. He also worked at EDUCOM (now EDUCAUSE) and CREN in Washington, DC, and was responsible for the management of the BITNET national network. Previously, he held positions with the University of Delaware, the University of Maryland Applied Neuroscience Institute, the University of British Columbia and Micros Systems.

Mr. Hrybyk is the past president of the BC Internet Association, and a founding director of the Vancouver Community Network. He is a member of the Internet Society, the Association for Computing Machinery and IEEE. Mr. Hrybyk gives frequent talks on advanced networks throughout North America, and teaches the Computer Networks course in the Bachelor of Technology program at BCIT.

 

Jim Cranston, CIO, SFU

Jim Cranston is an Engineer, MBA who joined SFU in September, 2001 into the newly created position of Chief Information Office. At SFU the CIO has responsibility for the backbone network and telephone system, administrative systems (PeopleSoft ERP and numerous Departmental systems), institutional services (computer account management, e-mail, web/file space for students/faculty/staff, student computing labs), HPC research support, microcomputer store, desktop support for major administrative units, IT/Network security and establishing computing policies, standards across the University.

Prior to joining SFU Jim was a management consultant for over 26 years whose practice encompassed a wide range of information technology, organizational improvement, strategic/business planning and other assignments for a variety of private and public sector clients in transportation, utilities, oil and gas, government and forest products. During this time he worked throughout North America, South America and South East Asia.

 

Mark Roman, Executive Director, Uvic

Mark Roman is the Executive Director, Computing and System Services at the University of Victoria.  Prior to joining UVic, he worked at Carleton University in Ottawa.  Mark served at the I.T. Director and Vice President levels in the insurance and banking industries before moving into higher education.  Strategic systems consulting enabled Mark to gather international I.T. experience.  He is currently looking forward to settling in Victoria to enjoy the wonderful weather.

 

Brian Mackay, CIO, TRU

Brian Mackay is Associate Vice President, IT Services and CIO for Thompson Rivers University, BC’s newest university based in Kamloops, BC with over 25,000 students enrolled in both face-to-face and distance programs.

Brian is currently implementing an IT strategy that supports TRU’s multi-campus and open learning (distance) mandates. IT projects underway include connecting TRU to BCNET, an enterprise administrative systems renewal project, implementing business intelligence tools in all areas at TRU, VoIP and Video over IP, campus wireless bubble expansion, identity management, on-campus residence network services, synchronous and asynchronous learning technologies, disaster recovery, and by January 2007, amalgamating all IT infrastructure in Burnaby and Kamloops in a new facility currently under construction in Kamloops.

Brian has nearly 20 years experience leading IT teams. Before joining TRU, Brian was the CIO at the Open Learning Agency (OLA). Before joining OLA Brian ran global IT for Vancouver-based Teekay Shipping Ltd, the world’s largest oil shipping company and one of BC’s largest public companies. Brian has diplomas in Operations Management and Computer Systems Technology from BCIT as well as an Advanced Diploma in Management and an MBA from Athabasca University.

 

Ian McLeod, Director Computing Resources, BCIT

Ian McLeod is currently serving his fifth year as Director of Computer Resources at the British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT). In this capacity he is responsible for supporting an evolving learning and teaching environment, applied research, and increasing demands for superior administrative information and systems. Prior to joining BCIT, Mr. McLeod was the Director of Information Management Services at the School District #36 (Surrey), a position he held for 11 years.

A B.Sc. in Computer Science from the University of Regina and 27 years of IT experience in several different industries bring a breadth and depth of knowledge on the impact of technology on business, and for the last 15 years, in the “business of education”.

Mr. McLeod also holds a Certified Computing Professional (CCP) designation from the Institute for Certification of Computing Professionals (ICCP), and an Information Systems Professional (I.S.P.) certification from the Canadian Information Processing Society (CIPS).

BCIT is one of Canada’s largest polytechnic institutions, with 5 campus locations, approximately 50,000 annual registrations, over 2,000 faculty and staff, and an annual budget of approximately $214 million.

 

Keir Novik, PhD, Manager, Information Technology, BCNET

Keir Novik is the IT Manager for BCNET, seconded part-time from SFU Operations and Technical Support. At BCNET he is responsible for core services and supporting the Applications Advisory Committee working groups. Recent projects have been in the areas of videoconferencing, collaboration technology, and identity management. Keir was previously at the University of London, UK, and obtained his PhD in computational physics from the University of Cambridge, UK.

 

Mike Keating, Manager, Education Services, UVic

 

 

Eric Byres, Research Faculty, BCIT

Eric J. Byres is a Professional Engineer and research leader at the Critical Infrastructure Security Centre at the British Columbia Institute of Technology, one of North America's leading research facilities in the field of industrial cyber-security. As well as conducting security research, Eric currently provides consulting to government security agencies, major oil companies and power utilities on cyber protection for critical infrastructures. In October 2003, he testified to Congress on the “Security of Industrial Control Systems in National Critical Infrastructures”.

Eric currently holds the Advanced Systems Institute (ASI) fellowship for industrial network security research. In September 2000 he was awarded the IEEE Outstanding Industry Applications Article Prize for his paper on process control network security and in 2004 he was honored with the Donald P. Eckman Education Award given by the Instrumentation, Systems, and Automation Society (ISA). This award recognizes "outstanding educational and training contributions to the fields of industrial data communications, network security, and fieldbus technology". Most recently he was the recipient of the 2005 “Keith Otto Award” presented by ISA for his article titled, “Insidious threat to control systems”.

 
 

Darren Lissimore, Senior Research Associate, BCIT

 

 

Nate Kube , Senior Research Associate, BCIT/Wurldtech

 

 

 

Dr. Charles Krasic, Assistant Professor, Computer Science, UBC

I joined the faculty at UBC in August 2003. I did my Ph.D. (2003) at OGI/OHSU, working under Prof. Jonathan Walpole. I received my M.Math (1996) and B.Math (1992) from the University of Waterloo.

 

Dr. Ljiljana Trajkovic, Professor, School of Engineering Science, SFU

Ljiljana Trajkovic is currently a Professor in the School of Engineering Science at Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. From 1995 to 1997, she was a National Science Foundation Visiting Professor in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Department, University of California, Berkeley. She was a Research Scientist at Bell Communications Research, Morristown, NJ, from 1990 to 1997, and a Member of the Technical Staff at AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ, from 1988 to 1990. Her research interests include high-performance communication networks, control of communication systems, computer-aided circuit analysis and design, and theory of nonlinear circuits and dynamical systems. Dr. Trajkovic is currently serving as president-elect of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society. She is Chair of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society joint Chapter of the Vancouver/Victoria Sections. She was Technical Program Co-Chair of ISCAS 2005 and served as Technical Program Chair and Vice General Co-Chair of ISCAS 2004. She served as an Associate Editor of the IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems (Part I) and (Part II), and the IEEE Circuits and Systems Magazine. She is a Fellow of the IEEE.

 

Dan Vanderster, GridX1 (UVic)

Daniel Vanderster is a PhD student involved with the GridX1 project at the University of Victoria. He completed his undergraduate education in Computer Engineering at the University of Victoria in 2003. Vanderster’s other research interests include investigating resource allocation strategies and quality of service for computational grids, as well as temperature-aware task scheduling for data centres.

 

Dugan O’Neil, Assistant Professor, Dept of Physics, SFU

Dugan O’Neil is an Assistant Professor with the Department of Physics at Simon Fraser University. He is also a researcher with the D0 Project, an international collaboration studying matter and the interactions of matter in the smallest possible scale. O’Neil’s research interests include high energy physics, fundamental particles and their interactions, proton-antiproton collisions at the Fermilab Tevatron, and high performance computing, data handling and processing.

 

Christopher Hearty, Associate Professor, Dept of Physics and Astronomy, UBC

Christopher Hearty is an Associate Professor and IPP Research Scientist with the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of British Columbia. Hearty’s area of research is subatomic physics. He recently completed a term as Physics Analysis Coordinator for BaBar, an international collaboration undertaking research at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. He is also the Principle Investigator of the Canadian BaBar group, which includes nine faculty members, five research associates and 14 graduate students.

 

Roger Moore, Assistant Proffesor, Physics, U of A

Roger Moore is an Assistant Professor with the Department of Physics at the University of Alberta. His main research focus is high energy physics, with a particular interest in studying the properties of the top quark and looking for evidence of Supersymmetry, a possible symmetry between force and matter that could explain the preponderance of cold dark matter observed in the Universe.

 

Louis Fox, Vice Provost, University of Washington

In his day job, Louis Fox is Vice Provost for Partnerships and Learning Technologies at the University of Washington, where he has been for the last twenty years and has held numerous academic and administrative posts, all with obscure titles. The office he leads connects the research and education expertise of the UW to a range of communities – locally, statewide, nationally, and internationally; and develops and diffuses new learning technologies. Lacking hobbies, Fox also leads a national Internet2 K20 Initiative, which brings together Internet2 members (180 research institutions) with primary and secondary schools, colleges and universities, libraries, and museums to get new technologies—advanced networking tools, content, and applications—into the hands of innovators, across all educational sectors in the United States, as quickly and as “connectedly” as possible, and to link these innovators to similar communities around the globe. At the request of Washington Governor Gary Locke, Fox recently relinquished the last shreds of a normal life and accepted a new role as founding CEO of the Washington Digital Learning Commons, a distance learning initiative to support students and teachers in Washington State.

 

Shannon Kelly, Program Head and Research Co-Chair, School of Computing and Academic Studies, BCIT

Shannon Kelly holds a Ph.D. in Language and Literary Analysis from the University of Waterloo. She is full-time faculty at the British Columbia Institute of Technology (Communication Department), and enjoys "guest stints" teaching communications and “enlightened” leadership in industry. Her diverse background in both academia and technology includes lecturing for the Faculty of Mathematics at the University of Waterloo, and serving as director of communications for a software company in Vancouver. As a Program Head and Research Co-Chair for her School, Shannon’s current research examines the nature of emerging “virtual” relationships, including possible linguistic, intellectual, and technological frameworks for these relationships.

 

Robert Grant, Associater Professor, Renewable Resources, UofA

Dr Robert Grant is a Professor in the Department of Renewable Resources at the University of Alberta. Dr Grant’s research interests lie in the area of mathematical modeling of physical, chemical, and biological processes in soil-plant-atmosphere systems as a means of studying resource management and conservation in agricultural, grassland and forest ecosystems under current or future climates. He was awarded the McCalla Professorship in 2005.

 

Benoit Pirenne, Assistant Director, Information Technology, NEPTUNE Canada Project, UVic

Benoit Pirenne is the Assistant Director, IT, for Neptune Canada. Pirenne joined the NEPTUNE project in October 2004. Prior to his position at NEPTUNE he worked for the European Southern Observatory (ESO) as the head of the Operations Technical Support department. While at the ESO, Pirenne played a key role in the development of the ESO’s end-to-end data system, this system was recently awarded Computer World’s 21st Century Achievement award recognizing world-class IT excellence.

 

Dr. Andrew Calvert, Associate Professor, SFU

Dr. Andrew Calvert is an Associate Professor specializing in Applied Seismology at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. Dr. Calvert received his B.A. in Mathematics from Oxford University and his Ph.D in geophysics from Cambridge University. His research interests include the reflection imaging of faults in the Canadian continental crust, the mapping of variations in rock properties using seismic tomography, and the location of non-volcanic tremors caused by slow-slip in the Cascadia subduction zone.

 

Honourable Murray Coell, Minister of Advanced Education and Minister responsible for Research and Technology

Murray Coell was appointed Minister of Advanced Education and Minister responsible for Research and Technology on June 16, 2005. He previously served as Minister of Community, Aboriginal and Women's Services. He was first elected in 1996 to represent the riding of Saanich North and the Islands and was re elected in 2001 and 2005.

Prior his election to the Legislative Assembly, Murray served on Saanich Municipal Council for 12 years, 6 of them as mayor. From 1989 to 1996, he also served as Chair for the Capital Regional District, the Saanich Police Board and the Capital Regional District Hospital Board, and as Deputy Chair for the Municipal Finance Authority. Murray has worked as both a social worker, specializing in alcohol and drug rehabilitation and services for those with mental disabilities, and a small business owner. He has served as a volunteer for 10 years on the board of Silver Threads Meals on Wheels and for five years on the board of the Queen Alexandra Hospital for Children.

He received his Bachelor of Arts in Social Welfare from the University of Victoria. Murray is committed to the people of Saanich North and the Islands and, if re elected, will continue to serve as their voice in the Legislature.

 

Brian Corrie, Collaboration and Visualization Coordinator for WestGrid and Collaboration and Visualization Coordinator for IRMACS, SFU

Brian Corrie is the Collaboration and Visualization Coordinator for the WestGrid Collaboration and Visualization research program and SFU’s Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Math and Advanced Computational Science. Brian’s research interests are in advanced collaborative environments, computer graphics, scientific visualization, virtual environments (VE), and coupling computational simulation to visualization. Over the last ten years Brian has been involved in the establishment of three virtual environment facilities including the Virtual Environments lab at the Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra, Australia, the Virtual Environments Technology Centre (VETC) at the National Research Council of Canada’s Integrated Manufacturing Technologies Institute in London, Ontario, and the Immersive Media Lab at the New Media Innovation Centre (NewMIC) in Vancouver, British Columbia. He was the Project Leader for the Collaborative VE project at ANU, the Technical Leader at the VETC, and the Focus Area Leader for the Immersive and Collaborative Environments research program at NewMIC. Brian joined WestGrid and IRMACS in 2004 to coordinate and manage their collaborative and visualization research programs and facilities.

 

Pierre Boulanger, Professor/iCORE Industrial Chair, U of A

Dr. Boulanger graduated from Laval University in Engineering Physics where he received his Masters in Physics. He completed his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering at the University of Montreal. He worked for 18 years at the National Research Council of Canada as a senior research officer. Since July 1st 2001, he has been a professor at the University of Alberta doing research and teaching on virtualized reality systems. He is also an adjunct scientist and principal investigator for new media at TRLabs and at the Banff Centre. In 2005, Dr. Boulanger was awarded an iCORE industrial chair on Collaborative Virtual Environment. He has published more than 150 scientific papers in various Journals and Conferences. He is on the editorial board of two major academic journals. He is also the Director of the Advanced Man Machine Interface Laboratory (http://www.cs.ualberta.ca/ammi).

 

McLean Mashingaidze-Greavees, President, Founder, The Nimble Company

MMG was the driving creative force behind a revolutionary format that landed 5 Gemini nominations in its inaugural season as well as selection in the prestigious 2003 INPUT TV conference (Denmark) and 2 Leo Awards (including Best Variety Show). His second season followed up with more acclaim including Gemini, Webby and a prestigious Emmy® nomination for Advanced Media. Season three landed four Gemini nominations and a Media Person Of The Year nomination at the Western Canadian Music Awards. Most recently, MMG created and executive produced Burning To Shine, an intimate documentary on the rapper K-OS collaborating with the CBC Radio Orchestra.

The NIMBLE Company signals MMG's return into new media entrepreneurialism, after producing 300+ episodes of music, variety & interactive public broadcasting. Prior to his recent foray in television, MMG was an internet content pioneer in New York City where, as founder of the urban dotcom company VMI, he was twice selected as a Silicon Alley "cyber star" by the Village Voice and Virtual City magazines. His new media work has drawn positive reviews from the likes of The New Yorker, Entertainment Weekly, The New York Times, Wired and Crain's Business Weekly. Former clients include filmmaker Spike Lee, music mogul Sean "P-Diddy" Combs and media giant Time Warner. MMG's NYC days also included stints as VP of Content at HBO's Volume.com, Associate New Media Editor at PAPER magazine and contributor to Essence, Vibe, BET Weekend & The Source magazines. As a guest lecturer, MMG has presented at the 2005 PBS Technology Conference, Western Canadian Music Awards, New York University, Columbia University School of Business, Pratt Institute and more.

 

 

Paul Amodeo, VP Sales, Syntagma

An accomplished business strategist, entrepreneur and early adopter of emerging technologies, Paul Amodeo has over 25 years of executive level experience in the Information Technology Industry. His early achievements include an exceptional track record of successful projects with network integrators, distributed computing manufacturers and value added telecommunications companies such as The Boeing Company, Computer Sciences Corporation, Datapoint and Bell Canada.

In 1994, Amodeo began importing and distributing internet related networking technologies across Canada, merged with Solunet Inc. USA in 1996 and helped build North American revenues to over U$218M by 2001. More recently, as an independent contractor, he was instrumental in securing a multi-million dollar systems integration project to supply optical network components for the construction of the Government of Alberta’s SuperNet. Paul is currently helping to launch a new breed of Network Services Provider focused on delivering Next Generation IP applications including VoIP Centrex, broadband video (IPTV), audio/video collaboration services, and a range of hybrid technologies for wireless and edge network aggregation.

Amodeo has a degree in Business Administration and Computer Science from Ryerson University, extensive industry training and technical certifications from multiple equipment manufacturers plus security clearance to SECRET with the Canadian federal government.

 

Bernard Jules, Sr. Project Manager of Internet and New Media Technology, CBC/Radio-Canada

 

 

Cathy King, Director, Member Relations, Netera

Cathy King is the Director of Member Relations and Communications for Netera Alliance. Netera operates as an Alberta-based, not-for-profit alliance that coordinates Alberta's inter-institutional information and communication technology (ICT) research infrastructure, in the shared interests of the major research and education organizations in the province. Netera also provides project management to WestGrid (Western Canada Research Grid), a consortia of western Canada research institutions that support high performance computing and collaboration resources for researchers across Canada. Through her work with Netera, King has collaborated with hundreds of researchers and educators at Alberta colleges and universities in the areas of High Performance Computing (HPC), visualization, advanced collaboration, distance education and video streaming.

 

Graham Mowbray, Executive Director, ACEnet

Graham Mowbray is the Executive Director of ACEnet (Atlantic
Computational Excellence Network). ACEnet is a partnership of 7 Atlantic Canada universities with a mandate to expand over time to serve the entire region. ACEnet relies on the capabilities of the ORANs in Newfoundland & Labrador, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick/PEI. Graham has a broad background in Networks and Information Technology. He was business manager for the first Departmental network for the Government of Newfoundland & Labrador, he participated in business function specific networks such as the Hibernia Oil and Gas project, a Newfoundland Health network and web-based government services delivery in Ireland. Most recently, prior to joining ACEnet he was the principal consultant for Focus Atlantic an IT and Networking consultant responsible for business planning and the development of architectures, strategy and management of regional broadband projects under Industry Canada's BRAND program.

 

Scott Mah, Director of Communications Technology, University of Washington

Scott Mah is an Assistant Vice President for Computing & Communications Service Delivery & Support at the University of Washington. He is responsible for customer services, technical operations, provisioning, and the engineering teams that support the data center, networking, and telecommunications. He also oversees business continuity efforts, external initiatives, and a growing regional optical network serving the University of Washington, Pacific Northwest Gigapop, Washington State K-20 Network, and other strategic partners.

 

Marilyn Hay, Manager, Network Engineering, BCNET and Manager, Network Management Centre, UBC

Marilyn Hay is currently serving her fifth year as Manager of the Network Management Centre at the University of British Columbia Institute in Vancouver, BC. In this capacity she is responsible for the operation, support, design, and engineering for the UBC campus networks including data, telephony, and video. BCNET contracts all of its Network Engineering and Operational support through UBC. Marilyn reports within BCNET as the Manager of Network Engineering and this team spans the peer IT Networking groups of BCNET’s member universities.

Marilyn has 20 years experience in computing and network support while completing a Computing Technology Diploma at SAIT in Calgary and a B.Sc. in Computer Science from UBC.

 

Gary Finley, Director of Networking, Netera Alliance

I am the Director of Networking for Netera Alliance Inc., the non-profit consortium that manages Alberta's high speed research and education network. Our next-generation network connects a number of Alberta universities and colleges at gigabit speeds. In addition to carrying ultra-broadband routed TCP/IP traffic, NeteraNet features the ability to allocate dedicated wide-area optical circuits (called lightpaths) for demanding research applications. In cooperation with the CA*net4 national research network, Netera's lightpath services support the WestGrid Project, which links high performance computing and networked storage resources at eight academic institutions in Alberta and B.C.

 
Dr. George Chiu, Senior Management of Advanced Server Hardware Systems,
IBM Research Division


Dr George Chiu is the Senior Manager of Advanced Server Hardware Systems in the Systems Department at the Thomas J. Watson Research Center. He received a PhD degree in astrophysics from the University of California at Berkeley in 1978, and an MS degree in Computer Science from Polytechnic University in 1995. He joined IBM in 1980 after having been on staff at Yale University. Dr. Chiu is a member of the International Astronomical Union, and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. He has worked on picosecond device and internal node characterization, laser beam and electron beam contactless testing techniques, functional testing of chips and packages, optical lithography, display technologies, computer packaging, and supercomputing.

 

Simon Alban, Senior Instructor in the Division of Biomolecular and Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, UBC

Simon P. Alban, University of British Columbia, is a Senior Instructor in the Division of Biomolecular and Pharmaceutical Chemistry at the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences. He currently teaches a third-year lecture/laboratory course in pharmaceutical analysis and has research interests in scholarly teaching and the scholarship of teaching and learning with a focus on learning-centered education in the basic pharmaceutical sciences. Simon is currently involved in an NSF funded pilot program to evaluate the use WWU’s Integrated Laboratory Network (ILN) for implementation at UBC. His most recent articles on the use of remote instrumentation include: A Learning-Centered Course in Pharmaceutical Analysis, [Am J Pharm. Ed. 2004:68(5):article 114] and Creating Authentic Learning Activities in Pharmaceutical Instrumental Analysis: Using the Integrated Laboratory Network for Remote Access to Scientific Instrumentation [Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks (2005, 9(2):4-19)].

 

Devon A. Cancilla, Director of Scientific Technical Services, WWU

Devon A. Cancilla, is the Director of Scientific Technical Services and an associate professor of environmental science at Western Washington University where he teaches environmental chemistry. He has been the lead investigator in the development of the Integrated Laboratory Network (ILN), a project currently funded by the National Science Foundation to use remote instrumentation in the classroom and laboratory. The ILN project won a Most Effective Practice Award from the Sloan Consortium in 2004. Recent publications of this work appear in the Journal of Chemical Education (2004, 81(12):1809-1813) and the Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks (2005, 9(2):4-19).

 

Dr. David Kaufman, Director, Learning & Instructional Development Centre and Professor, Faculty of Education, SFU

Dr. Kaufman is the 1998 recipient of Dalhousie University's Instructional Leadership Award for his efforts in promoting and enhancing teaching. In July, 2001, he was appointed as Director, Learning & Instructional Development Centre at Simon Fraser University and more recently, Professor in the Faculty of Education. Besides his administrative duties, he continues academic work in the areas of educational research, teaching faculty and graduate students, supervising graduate students, presenting at professional meetings, and serving on university committees. In October, 2004, Dr. Kaufman was awarded an SSHRC INE Collaborative Research Initiative grant of $3 million for four years on Simulation and Advanced Gaming Environments (SAGE) for Learning.

 

John Moore, Associate Director,  Learning & Instructional Development Centre, SFU

John Moore has thirty years of experience in developing programs and media for education. He holds a B. Sc. and M.A. form McGill University plus teaching credentials. John has led numerous distance education teams in the development of curriculum materials, both as a Manager at the Open Learning Agency and in the private sector. Besides high school, and numerous workshops on teaching enhancement, John taught Multimedia Production, Courseware Authoring, and Desktop Publishing at Capilano College. John spent five years working in the Caribbean for the University of West Indies developing their new Distance Education Centre. Currently John is the Associate Director of the Learning and Instructional Development Centre at Simon Fraser University.

 

Rene Hatem, CANARIE

 

 

Art Pelletier, Head of Client Services, Export Development Canada

Art has worked in a number of areas within the IT field for 35 years, currently with Export Development Canada. He was a core member of the EDC’s Re-Engineering project in the mid-1990’s which essentially re-designed the corporation. He currently leads the Client Services department, within the IT division, providing a broad range of services to the corporation, including Business Continuity Planning (BCP) coordination, Help Desk and Hardware support, Server Infrastructure, SAN management, Telecommunications and Data Warehousing. His staff supports over 1000 EDC users across Canada and abroad. He was a member of the Knowledge Management Council of the Conference Board of Canada and is currently a member of the Innovation Council. He is frequently consulted by government and private sector organizations on Business Continuity (and other subjects) and has spoken at several conferences about BCP.

 

Slavica Ceperkovik, Production Coordinator, Banff New Media Institute

Slavica Ceperkovic received her BFA in new media studies from Ryerson University, Toronto, in 2000 and her Diplome from Le Fresnoy Studio National des Arts Contemporains, France, in 2003. Her interactive installation and video work has been exhibited throughout Europe, Canada and most recently in the United States. Her work has been reviewed by aro Newspaper, Beaux Arts Magazine, Telerama and Liberation. She was recently the visiting artist instructor at the Alberta College of Art and Design in its media arts digital technologies department. Currently, Ceperkovik is the co-production coordinator at The Banff Centre’s Banff New Media Institute (BNMI).

 

Mark Zuberbuhler, Executive Producer/Director for Telestudios, UBC

Mark Zuberbuhler – Mark is the Manager and Executive Producer for UBC Telestudios with responsibilities for executive management, strategic planning and project development. He has over 20 years of television broadcast and New Media experience and has won numerous awards for video and multimedia productions.
Telestudios is integrated within UBC ITServices who provide information technology services, support and leadership to the University of British Columbia. Telestudios offers support to the academic/network community with the primary objective to work collaboratively and strategically with our partners. The creative team members are specialists in webcasting, broadcast video, interactive multimedia, videoconferencing, photography and digital imaging.

 

 

Dr. Konstantin Beznosov, Assistant Professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, UBC

Konstantin (Kosta) Beznosov is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, the University of British Columbia, conducting research in the area of distributed systems security. He founded and leads Laboratory for Education and Research in Secure Systems Engineering (LERSSE). LERSSE is devoted to the research and training in all technical aspects of engineering secure systems. Prior that, Dr. Beznosov was a Security Architect with Quadrasis, Hitachi Computer Products (America), Inc, where he designed and developed products for security integration of enterprise applications, as well as consulted large telecommunication and banking companies on the architecture of security solutions for distributed enterprise applications. Dr. Beznosov did his Ph.D. research on engineering access control for distributed enterprise applications at the Florida International University. He actively participated in standardization of security-related specifications (CORBA Security, RAD, SDMM) at the Object Management Group, and served as a co-chair of the OMG's Security SIG. He is a co-author of "Enterprise Security with EJB and CORBA" and "Mastering Web Services Security,"both with Willey & Sons.

 

Andrew Bjerring, President & CEO, CANARIE

Andrew Bjerring was a founding member of the Board of CANARIE Inc. and has been the President and CEO since October 1993. Over the past two decades, Bjerring has participated on numerous boards and councils dealing with networking and related applications. He currently chairs the advisory board for the Institute for Information Technology at NRC and is active on the boards of the Communications Research Centre and the C3.ca high performance computing initiative. He participates as a member of the Canadian e Business Initiative (CeBI.ca) and was a member of the National Broadband Task Force and chair of the economic benefits working group. Prior to his appointment at CANARIE, Mr. Bjerring spent 18 years as a faculty member and then senior administrator in academic planning and information technology services at the University of Western Ontario. He obtained his BASc. and MASc. degrees from the University of British Columbia and the University of Toronto, and his PhD from the University of Western Ontario.

 

Tom West, President & CEO, National Lambda Rail

Tom West is President and Chief Executive Officer of National LambdaRail, a major initiative of U.S. research universities and private sector technology companies to provide a national scale infrastructure for research and experimentation in networking technologies and applications.

Prior to his position with National LambdaRail, West served as the President and Chief Executive Officer for CENIC (Corporation for Education Network Initiatives in California) from 1999 to 2003, guiding the development and deployment of an advanced services network for higher education in that state. He has served as a small college president, as a vice chancellor for administration for regional campuses in a public university system, and for 26 years as the Chief Information Technology Officer (CITO) for two large public university systems-Indiana University (1973-1981) and the California State University (1981-1999).

West has been actively involved in national research and education networking in the United States for nearly two decades, including the NSFNET in the mid-1980s during the original round of Internet development. He also was a leader in the formation of Internet2 during the 1990s as a member of EDUCOM’s (now EDUCAUSE) National Telecommunications Task Force. He has been involved in the development of information technology at state government level, serving as a member of the Governor’s Information Technology Commission in California.

West has been recognized by his colleagues for his IT leadership. In 1990, he was named the first recipient of the CAUSE ELITE Award. Over the years, West has served as an advisor and consultant to a number of other higher education institutions and systems, private corporations and state governments.

 

Steve Corbato, Director of Backbone Network Infrastructure, Internet2 (via videoconference)

Steve Corbato is Director of Backbone Network Infrastructure for Internet2. In this position, he has primary responsibility for the Abilene network. He also holds an affiliate faculty position in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Washington, Seattle. Prior to joining Internet2 in June, 2000, Corbato was principal Internet engineer and manager of network engineering for the University of Washington. In this position, he led the technical development of the Pacific/Northwest GigaPoP, the regional Internet2 aggregation and advanced services network. He also helped develop the Washington State K-20 Telecommunications Network and collaborated on several demonstrations of high-performance networking applications, including one that established the Internet2 Land Speed Record in the spring of 2000.

 

Steve Grundy, Associate Vice-President Academic and Chief Information Officer, Royal Roads University

Dr. Grundy holds a PhD in chemistry from the University of Sheffield in England. His research interests started in pure chemistry and then moved to environmental chemistry. He has traveled extensively in the Canadian Arctic and the west coast of Canada as a field scientist with a specialization in contaminant transport mechanisms. As a member of the educational planning team, he was jointly responsible for the initial education plan at Royal Roads University. He was the Dean of Science, Technology and Environment at Royal Roads University prior to taking on his current position. Currently, he is responsible for academic quality and approval issues and the management of all information systems including e-learning. His hair lightening program is being handled by currently being responsible for deploying a new student system, new e-learning platform and a new portal and identity management system. He also serves on the Board of BCNet.

 

Lionel Tolan, Director, Academic Computing Services, SFU

 

 

Ray Hryciuk, Manager, HSE Management Systems, UBC

Raymond Hryciuk, P. Eng., M.B.A.      
Mr. Hryciuk is currently Manager, HSE Management Systems with UBC in Vancouver, where he is responsible for creating processes and tools to assist faculty and administrative departments to implement health, safety and environmental (HSE) management systems.  He advises and consults with all levels of the University administration, regulatory agencies and relevant authorities on HSE management systems issues and provides leadership and co-ordination in the development of the University-wide HSE management systems.  He also manages the University’s disaster and emergency response systems, including business continuity planning.
 
Before starting with UBC, he was a senior HSE consultant with three consulting companies from 1991 - 2002.  Prior to his consulting career, he worked for 17 years with Imperial Oil in a variety of management assignments at its fertilizer, petrochemical and petroleum facilities.
 
Mr. Hryciuk graduated from the University of Toronto with a B.A.Sc. in 1973 in Chemical Engineering and a M.B.A. in 1985.  He is a member of the Canadian Environmental Auditing Association (CEAA), the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of British Columbia and the Professional Engineers of Ontario. He has been a Certified Environmental Auditor (CEA) since 1996 and an Environmental Management System Lead Auditor (EMS(LA)) since 1999.

 

Susan Baldwin, Senior Director, Operations, CANARIE

Susan Baldwin is the Senior Director, Operations with Canarie Inc., involved in the strategic planning and implementation for both advanced broadband networks and advanced applications.

For two decades prior to joining Canarie, Ms. Baldwin held a variety of senior executive positions with various departments within the Government of Canada, including Executive Director, Broadcasting at the CRTC; Director General, Broadcasting Policy at the Department of Canadian Heritage where she designed and negotiated the Canada Television Fund; Director General, New Media and Director, Research and Technology Policy with Industry Canada.

Ms. Baldwin is on the Board of Trustees of the International Institute of Communications and Chairs the Broadcast and New Media Forum of the IIC. She holds an Honours BA from York University and an MA from the University of Toronto.

Dan Anderson, undergraduate student, departments of Computer Science and Mathematics at UBC

Dan Anderson is an undergraduate student in the departments of Computer Science and Mathematics at UBC. He has worked for companies including Pt. Grey Research and RSA Security. He is interested in many topics in computer security and in machine learning.

Ana Pop, Fourth year student, Computer Engineering, UBC

Ana Pop is a fourth year student attending the University of British Columbia. She is studying to receive her degree in Computer Engineering (Honours Mathematics Option). Her interests in microbiological applications of computer engineering concepts have driven her to do pursue graduate work to obtain a doctorate in this field. She has gathered research experience from two NSERC Undergraduate Student Research Awards over the past two summers, and planning to do a third this upcoming summer. Outside academia, she takes ballroom dancing lessons and enjoys tennis and snowboarding. She also volunteers as peer mentor and tutor to students in her past high school.

Gurpreet Virdi, Forth year student, Computer Engineering, UBC

I am a 4th year computer engineering undergraduate student at the University of British Columbia and will be graduating in April 2006. My engineering focus till now has been developing and designing software projects. I have a lot of fun in putting my hands into solid C/C++ code and creating a whole bunch of interesting products and outputs. During the latter half of my undergraduate degree my focus was shifted towards the specialized field of computer networking and protocols. I really enjoy this field and would continue to work in networking and related fields after graduation. On the side, I also enjoy reading about computer hardware and as a hobby I would like to build my own processor, suited to my software needs, very soon in the future.

Kit Mun Chan, Forth year student, Electrical Engineering, UBC

Kit Mun Chan is a fourth-year undergraduate student at the University of British Columbia. She is pursuing a degree in Electrical Engineering and will be graduating in May 2006. Her focus is in the areas of communication systems and power systems. She hopes to be working in either of these areas after graduation. During her free time, she enjoys reading books by Agatha Christie and listening to music.

Rob Simmonds, Canadian DataGrid: Giving Scientists Access to Data

Rob Simmonds is the director of research for the Grid Research Centre at the University of Calgary and the Chief Technology Officer for WestGrid. He is an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Calgary. Dr. Simmonds holds a PhD from the School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Bath, UK.

John Roston, Shared Spaces: HD Ultra-Videoconferencing

John Roston is Director of Instructional Multimedia Services, McGill’s centralized professional facility for video production and videoconferencing services, the production of interactive teaching materials and graphic design. He has 30 years experience in media production and use including 12 years in the design and programming of interactive video programs. He is a member of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Music Media and Technology at McGill and currently coordinates two research projects: "Shared Spaces," under the Canarie AAP program, and "Underwater Window" under the Canarie IIP program. He previously coordinated the research projects "McGill Advanced Learnware Network" and "Remote Video Interpreting using CA*net3: Health Access for Deaf People."

Stuart Lomas, End-to-end Lightpaths to Synchrotrons

Stuart Lomas is the principal software architect of BigBangwidth Lightpath Accelerator. Lightpath Accelerator extends CANARIE User Controlled Lightpaths by automatically moving large network traffic flows onto User Controlled Lightpaths. Stuart has more than 20 years of industry experience including projects with General Electric, Hewlett Packard, the Bank of Montreal, Hydro Quebec, Hughes Aircraft and the German Bundespost.

Louise Sauvé, ENJEUX - Learning about learning in a virtual environment

Louise Sauvé, Ph. D is Professor of Learning Technology at the UER education of Télé–Université, director of the Research Centre on continued learning, chair of SAVIE and co-responsible for the SAGE network. Prolific author and highly skilled researcher, she has been at the head of multidisciplinary, interinstitutional canadian teams for more than fifteen years. Recipient of a Mention of the Minister of education 2005 (distance learning), winner of the ACED 2000 Award of Excellence, she also received the Prix Philippe Marton (1997) for her contribution to the field of learning technology. Her research domains and expertise touch the following sectors : educational games on the inforoute, personalization of learning throughout life, the competence profiling and learning in a context of return to and persistence in studies, e-portfolio, methodologies for conceiving interactive multimedia environments for distance learning on the inforoute, the study of interactive phenomena on the inforoute, technologies and distance learning as wllw as the communities of practice in network. As responsible for the project ENJEUX-S , Dr. Louise Sauvé brings to this project her expertise in course development for distance learning and that of interactive multimedia products on the inforoute as well as that of networking animation.
OMAR CHERKAOUI, Deploying Bio-Grid Applications over Light Infrastructure

OMAR CHERKAOUI (cherkaoui.omar@uqam.ca) received a Ph.D. degree in computer science in 1990 from the University of Montreal and is currently a professor and a director of the Teleinformatics Laboratory at the University of Quebec in Montreal. His research interests include network management (standardization, protocols, configuration, validation, modelling, testing), optical networks, etc. He was member of the technical program committees of a dozen network management conferences (IM, NOMS and DSOM, etc.).
Jacqueline Bourdeau, BEST: Giving PhD Students Better Tools

Jacqueline Bourdeau is team leader for the BEST project, as well as for the SCORE infrastructure (CFI), and for the Kaleidoscope european network of excellence. A professor of Educational Technology at Tele-university-UQAM in Montreal, she was the director of the LICEF research center in 2000-2003, with projects in Learnings environments, experimentation, and innovation.
Tim Bray, Sun's Director of Web Technologies based in Vancouver, BC

Tim Bray is Sun's Director of Web Technologies and is based in Vancouver, BC. Tim is perhaps best known as the co-inventor of XML, the extensible markup language that has become an essential component of Web services.
Tim managed the Oxford English Dictionary project at the University of Waterloo in 1987-1989, co-founded Open Text Corporation in 1989, launched one of the first public web search engines in 1995, co-invented XML 1.0 and co-edited "Namespaces in XML" between 1996 and 1999, and served as a Tim Berners-Lee appointee on the W3C Technical Architecture Group (http://www.w3.org/2001/tag) in 2002-2004.

Since joining Sun, Bray has helped launch the Sun blogging explosion and worked with the team that helped convince the European Commission to recommend the use of the OpenOffice.org XML file format. Bray has also been heavily involved in a related technology known as RSS, or real simple syndication.

Tim publishes a popular weblog at tbray.org, and co-chairs the IETF AtomPub Working Group.
Lauren Wood, Senior Technical Program Manager, (interoperability and technology partnerships), Sun Microsystems

Lauren Wood is a senior technical program manager for interoperability and technology partnerships at Sun Microsystems. She chairs the Liberty Alliance's Business Marketing Expert Group. Lauren has served on many technical and advisory committees, including W3C's Advisory Board (an elected position) and Advisory Committee, as well as chairing the W3C Document Object Model Working Group from its inception through to the successful publication of Level 2. She has worked as an independent consultant, is a published industry analyst, and was Director of Product Technology for SoftQuad Software. In the years 2001 - 2005 she chaired IDEAlliance's XML conference series in the US, the largest independent XML Conference in the world. Lauren holds a Ph.D. in theoretical nuclear physics from the University of Melbourne, Australia.
Mike Manginella, Western Director of Sales, LightPointe Communications.

Mike has spent the last 25 years in various sales and marketing positions in the high technology industry.  His areas of expertise are in network design, wireless and mesh networks, and high speed point to point wireless.  He has an Electrical Engineering degree and worked on network design before moving to sales and marketing.
 

 
Rick Richardson, Precision Camera

Rick Richardson entered the world of broadcast and industrial video in 1988 when he joined Sony of Canada after a successful career in radio communications.

The convergence of video and wireless technologies has created a natural progression for Rick to pursue his technical interests.
Now with Precision Camera Inc. Rick specializes in visual solutions for Corporate, Educational, Law Enforcement and Scientific markets.
 
MD. Maruf Monwar, Graduate Student, Computer Science, UNBC

"I am from Bangladesh and taking my M.Sc degree in Computer Science at the University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC). I am expecting to finish my degree by December this year. My research focuses are in the areas of computational biology and computer vision and I have some published papers in these fields. Specifically, parallel biological sequence alignment and microarray image processing in bioinformatics and video engineering in computer vision are my research topics. I hope to work in either of these fields in my PhD study. Outside academia, I love to play table tennis, cricket and badminton. I also often go to swimming and go for fishing in the summer time."
Gary McIntyre, Senior Information SecurityArchitect, Security, Identity and Privacy Practice, IBM Canada

Gary McIntyre is a senior information security architect with the Security, Identity and Privacy Practice at IBM Canada. A passionate generalist, Gary focuses on translating business strategy into information security governance, architecture and solutions. He has assessed and built enterprise information security programs and architecture for a number of manufacturing, oil and gas, financial, health care, insurance and public sector customers. He also brings a deep knowledge about current and emerging security technologies, and how they can be used as elements in long-term information security strategy. Gary is also a lead instructor with the International Information Systems Security Certification Consortium (ISC2) and frequently teaches in Canada and around the world.
David G. Michelson, IEEE Joint Communications Chapter

David G. Michelson has contributed to the development of high speed wireless access technology for over a decade. From 1996-2001, he served as a member of a joint AT&T Wireless Services (Redmond, WA) and AT&T Labs – Research (Red Bank, NJ) team concerned with development of propagation and channel models for next generation and fixed wireless systems. The results of this work formed the basis for the propagation and channel models later adopted by the IEEE 802.16 Working Group on Broadband Fixed Wireless Access Standards. From 2001-2002, he helped to oversee deployment of one of the world’s largest campus wireless LANs at the University of British Columbia while also serving as an adjunct professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. In 2003, he became a full-time faculty member at UBC where he now leads the Radio Science Lab. Prof. Michelson is a senior member of IEEE and serves as Chair of the IEEE VT-S Technical Committee on Propagation and Channel Modeling. He is an Associate Editor for propagation and channel modeling for IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology and Editor for Mobile Channels for IEEE Vehicular Technology Magazine. He chairs the IEEE Vancouver Section’s Joint Communications Chapter which represents the IEEE Communications Society, Antennas and Propagation Society, and Vehicular Technology Society. Under his leadership, the Chapter received Outstanding Achievement Awards from ComSoc in 2002 and 2005.
Kris Iniewski, Professor, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of Alberta

Krzysztof (Kris) Iniewski is an Associate Professor at the Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering Department of University of Alberta. He is also a President of CMOS Emerging Technologies Inc., a consulting company in Vancouver. His research interests are in advanced CMOS devices and circuits for ultra-low power wireless systems, medical imaging and optical networks.
From 1995 to 2003, he was with PMC-Sierra and held various technical and management positions in Research & Development and Strategic Marketing. Prior to joining PMC-Sierra, from 1990 to 1994 he was an Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto’s Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering department.
Dr. Iniewski has published over 80 research papers in international journals and conferences. He holds 18 international patents granted in USA, Canada, France, Germany, and Japan. He is frequent invited speaker and consults for multiple organizations internationally. He received his Ph.D. degree in electronics (honors) from the Warsaw University of Technology (Warsaw, Poland) in 1988. Together with Carl McCrosky and Dan Minoli he is an author of “Data Networks – VLSI and Optical Fibre”, Wiley, 2006. He is also an editor of “Emerging Wireless Technologies”, CRC Press, 2006.
Haminder Gill Sr. Director Technology Development & Product Management, Bell West

Harminder Gill holds the position of Sr. Director Technology Development & Product Management at Bell West. He was appointed to this position following Bell Canada’s acquisition of Group Telecom from 360networks in November 2004.
Mr. Gill joined 360networks in 1999. As Vice President, Network Architecture, he led the 360networks technology team in designing a leading-edge global carrier network. The team designed and deployed a world first optical mesh network and one of the early North American IP/MPLS networks. The team also led technical diligence and operational integration for multiple carrier acquisitions.
In previous positions, he has led teams responsible for deploying a large-scale ILEC ADSL network, designing a carrier IP/ATM network, and designing and provisioning wide area enterprise data networks. Mr. Gill also has experience in marketing, finance, regulatory, optical engineering, and wireless engineering.
Mr. Gill is a Professional Engineer by trade with a Bachelor of Applied Science from the University of British Columbia (1990) and a Master of Business Administration from the University of British Columbia (1996).
Alberto Leon-Garcia Professor, University of Toronto
Nortel Institute Chair for Network Architecture and Services


Alberto Leon-Garcia received the B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Southern California, in 1973, 1974, and 1976 respectively. He is a Full Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering of the University of Toronto and he currently holds the Nortel Institute Chair in Network Architecture and Services. In 1999 he became an IEEE fellow for "For contributions to multiplexing and switching of integrated services traffic".
Dr. Leon-Garcia was Editor for Voice/Data Networks for the IEEE Transactions on Communications from 1983 to 1988 and Editor for the IEEE Information Theory Newsletter from 1982 to 1984. He was Guest Editor of the September 1986 Special Issue on Performance Evaluation of Communications Networks of the IEEE Selected Areas on Communications. He is also author of the textbooks Probability and Random Processes for Electrical Engineering (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley), and Communication Networks: Fundamental Concepts and Key Architectures, co-authored with Dr. Indra Widjaja and to be published by McGraw-Hill January 2000.

Henry Ng

Henry Ng is an undergraduate student in the B.S. Information Technology program at Simon Fraser University. Throughout his undergraduate career, he received three NSERC Undergraduate Student Research Awards in total. He is a self-regulated learner in software development, and project management,
information security, and parallel computing.

Claudia Ng, MBA, P.Eng., (Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer)

Claudia is actively involved in all aspects of the company including its operations, engineering, deployment, finances, sales and strategic planning. Prior to starting FatPort, Claudia held several senior management positions at ActiveState (now acquired by Sophos), Blast Radius, PriceWaterhouseCoopers, and SHL Systemhouse (now EDS). She has also recently been voted to join the prestigious ranks of Business in Vancouver’s Top 40 under 40.
Claudia holds a Bachelor of Applied Science degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of British Columbia, and an MBA from Simon Fraser University.
Bryan Caron, High Bandwidth Real-time Remote Processing Systems & Grid for the ATLAS High Level Trigger


Bryan Caron is a Research Scientist and Manager of Research Computing at the Centre for Subatomic Research, University of Alberta. He is a member of the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, and CDF at Fermilab. Bryan is also active in the areas of Grid computing development with GridX1.
Lenny Chin, Director of Product Management and Marketing


Lenny Chin is director of product management and marketing of Lambda OpticalSystems, where he is responsible for managing and developing the company’s product portfolio and executing marketing strategies.. Utilizing his extensive knowledge in cross-connect technology, packet switching, and optical platform technology, Chin brings more than 19 years of telecommunications and data communications industry experience to the company.
Prior to Lambda OpticalSystems, Chin served as director and senior manager of transport switching and OSS integration at Tellabs, which designs and deploys technology for telecommunications service providers. Prior to this, Chin served as director of product management for Ocular Networks, a telecommunications start-up later acquired by Tellabs.
Previously, Chin held various product marketing and management positions for companies including Network Access Solutions, Ciena Corporation, Newbridge Networks (now Alcatel), Acterna, and Raytheon Corporation. Chin obtained his Master of Business Administration degree from Carnegie Mellon University and a Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from Syracuse University.
Worth Johnson, Director of Computer Operations

Worth Johnson has been involved with the BC Net board since 1987. He began his career at Simon Fraser University in 1969 and returned in 1986 as operations manager of Computing Services after 14 years at Canadian Airlines. In 1991, he became the director of Operations & Technical Support, which today also encompasses networks and the SFU telephone systems. On April 20, 2006 Worth marked his 20th anniversary with SFU.

MANJIT S. KANG
Director – TELUS Network Operations, Strategic Solutions



Manjit is a graduate of BCIT, and has had a career in the telecommunication sector for over 30 years. He has a strong marketing background combined with technical skills in voice, data and IP solutions.

His current leadership role in TELUS Network Operations involves the development and delivery of strategic customer solutions, integrating a broad range of TELUS services, and extending the capabilities of TELUS’ Next Generation service platform to meet and exceed customer needs. In his previous role in TELUS Business Marketing, Manjit directed the development of many new services, including the complete range of data communications and managed network services in the areas of IP Networks and Internet solutions for business customers.

Manjit has been a featured speaker and panelist on the topic of data communications and network management at industry educational forums and association events, and has developed and presented courses through BCIT’s Continuing Education program.

Jorge Delrio, TELUS Fellow, Chief Technology Office

Jorge Delrio is member of the Chief Technology Office at TELUS, responsible for defining the technology strategy and services roadmap for Wireless Broadband solutions for residential and enterprise markets. He has 19 years of experience in cellular, fixed access and in-building wireless technologies and has worked both for vendors and service providers spanning strategic planning, service development, product management, technical marketing, business development and network engineering functions. Prior to TELUS, Mr. Delrio worked for Nortel in the US, Latin America, the Middle East and Europe where he primed efforts to introduce and establish advanced wireless networks and solutions in key markets. Mr Delrio holds Bachelors and Masters degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Toronto.
Stephen Beaudry - Senior Systems Analyst for Royal Roads University

Stephen has filled a variety of technical positions at Royal Roads University since first joining the institution in 1998, initially as a faculty member instructing within the school of Information and Society, he now supports the Infrastructure of the University in the Academic and Information Systems department.

Choosing to return to Vancouver Island after working as far away as Beijing, his knowledge of network design, security and business continuity have been acquired while consulting in diverse environments,starting as a member of the consulting team of General Physics corporation.

While filling his duties as the senior network architect at RRU, Stephen is also the principal investigator in constructing an online virtual network laboratory, under a research partnership with Inukshuk Internet, aimed at providing the technology necessary to deliver advanced networking education to remote communities, especially northern Canadian areas.

Brian Crinkley, Network BC, Office of the CIO Province of BC

Brian currently works in the Office of the CIO for the Province of British Columbia. Brian has over twenty five years experience in the telecommunications including fourteen years with the Province of British Columbia. In the past four years he has been the team leader that built the business case for IP Telephony. The team went on to design the solution that includes two Nortel CS 2100 as well as over three hundred Nortel CS 1000x gateway devices. The design phase is now complete and the solution is about to be implemented by a joint team from the Ministry of Labour and Citizens' Services, TELUS and Nortel Networks.

Peter Jackson, Associate Professor, Environmental Science and Engineering, UNBC

Peter Jackson is an Associate Professor in Environmental Science and Engineering at the University of Northern BC, and co-director of the joint UBC/UNBC Environmental Engineering Program. He is a mesoscale meteorologist whose research mostly concerns windflow in complex terrain (i.e. in mountains and along coastlines) and environmental applications including dispersion of atmospheric pollutants, and insects such as the Mountain Pine Beetle, in those regions. In pursuing this theme he and his research group use both surface and Doppler Sodar observations, analytical models, and numerical atmospheric models run on UNBC’s High Performance Computing infrastructure. Dr. Jackson has successfully lead three CFI/BCKDF grant applications at UNBC, including two to establish and enhance the UNBC HPC Center.

 
Morgan Reid, Manager AV/Digital Video Producer, UBC

Morgan Reid is an educator, videographer, and instructional media specialist, and is a member of UBC's Instructional Support and Information Technology department in the Faculty of Arts.

Morgan's research interests include inquiry into the ways digital media technology, especially video, might either enhance teaching and learning, or possibly displace (inter)personal learning experiences, especially relating to social and ecological understanding. His theoretical interests are in the intersections of post-structuralist social theory, constructivist learning, and critical media studies.

Previous papers include "Online Learning and Intellectual Liberty," in College Teaching, vol 53, 2005, with Jonathan Wisenthal, Jeff Miller et al; "Toward a Mapping of Cyberspace" (1995); and "Geography as a Mechanism of Colonization" (1996).

Current and future research focuses on the communication and representation of social and ecological knowledge through media, the formation of communities through media production, and the effects of media experiences on ecological behaviour.



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