The pages in this section focus on our organization, its mission, history, and personnel.





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Key Biographies 2/5/12 — 2:56 EST

Before You Lies A Riverscape That Features The Sun Relfecting Off The Hudson River Thrugh Cirrus Clouds As Seen In Ossining, New York.

This Is Who We Are

(Revsion 1)

Here are some short sketches describing the backgrounds of our Officers and Directors.


Peter J. Wasilko

A photo of Peter J. Wasilko

Mr. Wasilko is uniquely qualified to lead this interdisciplinary effort since he is an Attorney licensed to practice in New York State holding a J.D., LL.M., and Certificate in Law, Technology, and Management from Syracuse University's College of Law.

He is a member of the New York State Bar Association (where he is a member of the Intellectual Property Section's Internet and Technology Law Committee and its newly formed Greentech Committee), The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, The Association for Computing Machinery, and The IEEE Computer Society.

His main interests are centered on Innovation Management, Information Science, Law and AI, Hypertext, Human-Computer Interaction, End User Programming, and Digital Library research. He has attended many academic conferences in a broad number of technical sub-disciplines and spoken with countless professionals, librarians, and researchers; beta tested commercial software; and looked at more enabling technologies than he could even begin to enumerate.

Accordingly, he wears many hats and handles the daily operations of The Institute until such time as professional staff can be brought on board to assist us.

In his own words, "We are at a unique juncture in history with the potential to leverage over thirty years of research in computer and information science to remake the information infrastructure of our nation and its allies, to empower ordinary people to make technology work for them, and to launch a new era of economic expansion. The scope of this endeavor is indeed staggering, but with your help and the insights that you can bring to the table, we can make history."


Craig Watters

A photo of Craig Watters

Craig Watters as an Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurial Practice in the Whitman School of Management at Syracuse University. He holds a PhD, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University.

Professor Watters works with Whitman's highly visible South Side Entrepreneurial Connect Project, advising teams of undergraduates and MBAs as they help small business owners and minority entrepreneurs on Syracuse's South Side grow their ventures. 

 

Watters was formerly dean for advancement in SU's School of Information Studies and director of its economic stimulus center, the I-Launch Pad. His research and community work led to his nomination for an economic development award from Senator Hillary Clinton in 2003 and travel to Ireland as part of Clinton's trade mission in 2002. His dissertation researched the impact of infrastructure on economic development in rural areas.


Brian Carl Laskiewicz

A photo of Brian Carl Laskiewicz

Brian Carl Laskiewicz, Esq., is an attorney-at-law admitted to practice law in the States of New Jersey and New York, as well as the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. Mr. Laskiewicz has practiced as a general practice attorney with an emphasis on local government law in New Jersey, during which time he appeared along with co-counsel on the briefs in the New Jersey Supreme court case Warren County Community College v. Warren County Board of Chosen Freeholders, 176 N.J. 432, 824 A.2d 1073 (N.J. 2003), a case dealing with the legal issue of whether a community college established without perfecting all statutory and constitutional requirements had the power to compel a county legislative body to make appropriations. Prior to practicing law in New Jersey, Mr. Laskiewicz served as a Law Clerk in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Hudson County, Law Division, Special Civil Part.

Mr. Laskiewicz is a member of the Intellectual Property Law Sections of the American Bar Association, New Jersey State Bar Association, and the New York State Bar Association, where he is a member of the Internet Law, Trademark Law, and Copyright Law Committees. In connection with his involvement with the Internet Law Committee, Mr. Laskiewicz gave a presentation to the Committee in April 2004 regarding the lack of a fair use defense under copyright law as applied to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, a piece of legislation passed by Congress in 1998 designed at providing adequate legal protection to owners of copyrights in works of digital media, such as CDs, DVDs, and computer software. He is also a member of the Entertainment, Arts and Sports Law Section and Commercial and Federal Litigation Section of the New York State Bar Association. In April 2004 he became a member of the Internet and Computer Law Committee of the New Jersey State Bar Association. He received his Juris Doctor degree from Rutgers Law School in Newark, NJ in May 2000. He also holds Bachelor of Arts (Economics) (May 1996) and Master of Business Administration (Finance) (May 1997) degrees from Seton Hall University. Mr. Laskiewicz also has an interest in studying the Spanish and Russian languages.


Gerry McKiernan

A photo of Gerry McKiernan

Gerry McKiernan currently serves as a Science and Technology Librarian and Bibliographer at Iowa States University (ISU) with specializations in Computer Science and selected fields of Engineering. Before joining ISU in April 1987, Gerry served as the Museum Librarian of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and as an Assistant Librarian with the Library of the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx, New York, his hometown.

Gerry is a member of the editorial boards of Science and Technology Libraries andThe Serials Librarian. He is contributing editor for Library Hi Tech News for his original column 'eProfiles,' and since 1997, he has been the contributing editor for the 'News from the Field' column for the Journal of Internet Cataloging. He has served as a proposal reviewer for the National Science Foundation is the Curator of The CyberStacks(sm), a virtual science and technology reference collection, and compiler of several Web registries and clearinghouses.

Gerry is a graduate of the University of Illinois, School of Library Science (1975), and the City University of New York.


Ken L. Norman

A photo of Ken Norman

Ken's interests are in cognitive psychology, human / computer interaction, and the design of electronic educational environments. He has been very interested in models of judgment and decision making and has applied these to the behavior of computer interfaces. Specifically, he has studied menu selection; and in 1991 published the first book on this topic: "The Psychology of Menu Selection: Designing Cognitive Control at the Human/Computer Interface".

More recently he has been looking at the user interface design of electronic classrooms and of all electronic education in general. He is currently working on the design of HyperCourseware and the issue of human/computer interaction in the classroom and beyond. Most of this effort has emerged in the on-line book: "Teaching in the Switched on Classroom: An Introduction to Electronic Education and HyperCourseware".

Ken received his undergraduate degree from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas in 1969 and his Ph.D. from the University of Iowa in 1973. After Iowa he went to UCSD in La Jolla, California for post doctoral research on judgment and decision making. His first teaching position was at the University of Alabama. He came to the University of Maryland in 1975 to join the Quantitative Psychology program and has been there ever since.

He is a member of the Human-Computer Interaction Lab and his most recent book is "Cyberpsychology: An Introduction to Human-Computer Interaction".


Kirk Richard St. Amant

Kirk St. Amant is an Associate Professor of Technical and Professional Communication at East Carolina University, and he is also on the faculty of ECU’s Master’s of Arts in International Studies (MAIS) program.  His research focuses on international and intercultural communication as it relates to online media and includes international virtual workplaces, international outsourcing/offshoring, and the effects of globalization on online education. He has worked on international projects for companies such as Medtronic, VERITAS Software, the Braun Corporation, and Unisys, and for the non-profit organizations the Humanitarian Demining Information Center (HDIC) and the Consortium for the Enhancement of Ukrainian Management Education (CEUME). Kirk is a senior member of the Society for Technical Communication (STC), and serves on the editorial board for the STC journal Technical Communication.  He is also the Associate Editor for Globalization and Outsourcing for the IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication – the journal of the IEEE Professional Communication Society.  

He holds a B..A. from Bowdoin College, an M.A. from James Madison University, and a Ph.D. from University of Minnesota. His primary areas of research and teaching are intercultural and international communication, online education in global environments, globalization and offshoring/international outsourcing, and the rhetoric of economics in global contexts.

Selected Publications and Presentations

With Robert Cunningham. (2009), “Examining Open Source Software in Offshoring Contexts: A Perspective on Adding Value in an Age of Globalization.” Technical Communication, 56:  361-369.

With Pavel Zemliansky (Eds.) Handbook of Research on Virtual Workplaces and the New Nature of Business Practices. Hershey, PA: Idea Group, 2008.

With Sigrid Kelsey (Eds.) Handbook of Research on Computer Mediated Communication Vol I. and Vol. II.  Hershey, PA: Idea Group, 2008.


Jeffrey Alan Smith

A photo of Jeff Smith

Jeff is a technologist holding an MA in Business Management from Indiana University of Pennsylvania, MA, Business Management and an MS in Information Science, Web Technologies and Database from the University of Pittsburgh. He is a member of the Association Computing Machinery and its SIGWEB interest group, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the Western PA Lotus Notes Users Group, and the Pittsburgh Websphere Users Group.

He has been a Software Account Manager, Field Support Engineer, and Systems Engineer at IBM and his technical skills include Java, XML, xHTML, JavaScript, PHP, Perl, C, J2EE, Zachman Framework, SOA, REST, AJAX,UML, Object Oriented Analysis / Object Oriented Design, RUP, Testing, Agile Development, Cloud Computing, Social Networking Analysis / Software, SaaS, PaaS,Eclipse, Rational, MS Project, MS Visio, Websphere Application Server, Websphere Portal, DB2, Adobe, MySql, Websphere sMash, Amazon ec2, Lotus Notes / Domino, Lotus Sametime, Lotus Quickr, Lotus Connections,Windows, AIX, Solaris, Linux, and iSeries.