FASTforward 08 interviews with speakers, attendees, and bloggers
by Hylton Jolliffe
Yesterday (Day Three), we posted the last round of video interviews from FASTforward 08. We encourage you to find the time to listen in - those interviewed had many insightful things to say, as did Jerry Michalski, our excellent host for the series, about Enterprise 2.0, the user revolution, search, and much, much more.
Day Three
- JP Rangaswami: CIO of British Telecom
- John Markus Lervik: CEO, FAST
- Nate Treloar: SVP, Interaction Technology, FAST
- Jevon MacDonald: blogger perspective
- Kiyosh Kurihara: President of Japanese analyst firm TechVisor JP, Ltd.
- Brooks Gibbins: vice president and general manager, financial services at FAST
- Kyoko Suzuki: Computer World Japan
Day Two
- Gerry Campbell: president, search and content technologies, Reuters
- Zia Zaman: executive vice president, global marketing, FAST
- Safa Rashtchy: speaker at FASTForward’08
- Jan Paul Raven: Knowledge Concepts
- Jared Spataro: group product manager, Microsoft
- Benjamin Rudolph: Search Discovery
- Jim McGee: consultant, author, blogger
- Mark Pfeiffer: SAILLABS
- Bill Ives: consultant, blogger
- Jon Husband: author, blogger, consultant
- Paula Thornton: experience design strategist
- Bjørn Olstad: CTO of FAST
- Sandy Kemsley: consultant and blogger
- Tim Stay: Perfect Search
- Liv Brahin: UBS
- Michael Cleary: Reuters
Day One
- John Hagel - consultant, author
- Joe McKendrick - analyst, blogger
- Bob Coxe - chief information officer for Criterion Systems
- Robert Paterson - Robert Paterson, consultant, blogger
- Clare Hart - EVP, Dow Jones & Company
- David Sutija - SVP of enterprise products, FAST
- David Weinberger - speaker, consultant, author
- Tom Davenport - consultant, author
- Jorn Ellefsen - CEO of Comperio
- Charles Fiesel - Roundarch
- Don Tapscott - strategist, author of “Wikinomics”
- Sue Feldman - research vice president, content technologies group, IDC
Keynotes:
- John Hagel: The Impact of the User Revolution on Your Organization
- David Weinberger: The Information Mess – And Why You Should Love It








