Sponsors
  • Hewlett Packard
  • Microsoft
  • Salesforce.com
  • eBay
  • Amazon Web Services
  • Conduit
  • Curl
  • EMC Corporation
  • Force10 Networks
  • Intuit Quickbase
  • Keynote Systems
  • LiveWorld
  • NeuStar
  • ONEsite
  • OpSource
  • S60
  • Sun Microsystems
  • Acquia
  • Ascentium
  • awareness
  • BlueArc
  • Coradiant
  • Dixero
  • HiveLive, Inc.
  • Intel
  • Jive Software
  • Kablink
  • Kapow Technologies
  • LithiumTechnologies
  • Mzinga
  • Octopz
  • Panther Express
  • RightScale
  • SynthaSite
  • TripAdvisor
  • WebAsyst LLC
  • XBOSoft
  • ACM Queue
  • Backbone Magazine
  • Berlin Partner
  • CenterNetworks
  • Contentinople
  • Deal
  • Dr. Dobbs
  • Enterprise Technology Management
  • Fast Company
  • I Want Media
  • ITtoolbox
  • Mashable
  • MSDN Magazine
  • Next New Networks
  • PR Newswire
  • ProgrammableWeb
  • SitePoint
  • Slashdot
  • Social Media Today
  • SourceForge.net
  • TechCrunch
  • TechNet
  • Technorati
  • Topix
  • Webgrrls
  • Wired
  • WOW

Sponsor & Exhibitor Opportunities

Kelly Stewart
415.947.6236
kstewart@techweb.com

Media Sponsor Opportunities

Matthew Balthazor
(949) 223-3628
mbalthazor@techweb.com
Deadline for requests: July 1

Speaker / Program Ideas

Have a suggestion for a speaker or topic at Web 2.0 Expo New York? Send an email to: ny-idea@web2expo.com

Press/Media Inquiries

Maureen Jennings
(707) 827-7083
maureen@oreilly.com
or
Natalia Wodecki
415-947-6762
NWodecki@techweb.com

Contact Us

View a complete list of Web 2.0 Expo contacts.

Designing for the Internet(s) of the Future

Genevieve Bell (Intel Corporation)
2:00pm Thursday, 09/18/2008
Topic: Design & UX
Location: 1A21 & 22

In less than forty years, the internet has moved from the margins of everyday life into a range of mainstreams: internet connectivity can be found on personal computers and laptops, in cell phones and other mobile devices, in satellite navigation systems, connected consumer electronics, gaming consoles and even personal health technologies. Similarly the internet touches and is touched by people all over the globe. It is an evolving sociotechnical system, rather than simply a technology. In this session, we will focus on many different pathways and trajectories along which the internet is evolving and transforming.

Photo of Genevieve Bell

Genevieve Bell

Intel Corporation

An internationally recognized ethnographer, Genevieve Bell has developed product shaping insights into consumers world-wide and is bringing a research driven, end-user focus to Intel. Her influence has been recognized with the award of Intel’s highest honor: an individual Intel Achievement Award. She is a Senior Principal Engineer and the Director of User Experience within Intel’s Digital Home Group and manages an inter-disciplinary team of social scientists, designers and human factors engineers. She and her team strive to stay ahead of Intel’s technology roadmap, using insights gained for in-depth ethnographic and design research to help drive innovations in and around Intel platforms, creating technology that responds to human needs, desires and aspirations. Bell is particularly interested in issues of cultural difference as they are expressed around technology adoption and use; she has conducted fieldwork around the world and is currently working on a book based on her recent ethnographic research in Asia. Her work has been widely published and cited and she is active in the fields of anthropology, computer-human interaction and ubiquitous computing. Raised in Australia, Bell received the bulk of her education in the United States. Prior to joining Intel in 1998, Bell taught anthropology and Native American Studies at Stanford University in California. Bell received her BA/MA in anthropology from Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania in 1991. She earned a PhD in cultural anthropology from Stanford University in 1998.