77 Massachusetts Avenue
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139
USA
Bob Frankston is perhaps best known as the co-creator with Dan Bricklin of VisiCalc (the first spreadsheet program) and the co-founder of Software Arts, the company that developed it, for which he was recognized with the ACM Software System Award and the MIT LCS Industrial Achievement Award and named a fellow by the ACM, the IEEE and the Computer History Museum. He’s a graduate of Stuyvesant High School and MIT, where he co-founded the Student Information Processing Board and worked on project MAC, worked at Lotus and Microsoft for a while, and is now an angel investor and a Distinguished Lecturer for the IEEE Consumer Electronics Society. In recent years, Frankston has been an outspoken advocate of ambient connectivity and for reducing the role of telecommunications companies in the evolution of the internet, particularly with respect to broadband and mobile communications. He coined the term “Regulatorium” to describe what he considers collusion between telecommunication companies and their regulators that prevents change.
This joint meeting of the Boston Chapter of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies and GBC/ACM will be held in MIT Room E51-315. E51 is the Tang Center on the corner of Wadsworth and Amherst Sts and Memorial Dr.; it’s mostly used by the Sloan School. You can see it on this map of the MIT campus.Room 315 is on the 3rd floor.
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