Dr. Dennis Jennings was selected to serve on the ICANN Board by the NomCom in 2007; his term expired in 2010. In 2009, he began to serve as the Board's Vice-Chair.[1] During his time with ICANN he also served as Chair of the Board Governance Committee. He is currently the Managing Director of Konus Ltd.[2]

Country: Ireland
LinkedIn:    [dennis-jennings Dennis Jennings]

Career History

Dr. Jennings' career has seen him pursuing venture capital endeavors, investments, serving on a variety of boards and within academia.

He co-founded 4th Level Ventures in 2002, and continues to work. 4th Level Ventures is a 17 million pound Irish venture capital company; it aims to invest in companies that are commercializing on opportunities arising form Irish research and academic institutions. Dennis is also an angel investor in a variety of early stage technology companies.[3]

Dr. Jennings was the director of University College Dublin (UCD) Computing Services from 1977 to 1999; he was responsible for the university's IT infrastructure and a staff of over 90 people. In 1986, he took leave from the University and acted as interim President of the Consortium for Scientific Computing at the John von Neumann Centre (JvNC) in Princeton, New Jersey; he took charge of starting its super computer center. Dennis is currently acting as Chairman of the Oversight Board of the Irish Centre for High-End Computing (ICHEC). [4]

He was also integral in creating NSFnet, in 1985-86, which is the network that preceded the Internet

Dr. Jennings was the Chair of the Board and General Assembly for CENTR, and actively ivolved in the formation of ICANN. He was also the President of EARN and a Board Member at Ebone.[5]

Education

Dr. Jennings holds a 1st Class honours physics BSc degree from University College Dublin (1967), and a PhD degree obtained for research on high-energy gamma radiation from pulsars (neutron stars) (1972).

Fun Fact

Dennis enjoys opera and classical music, and is the chairman of the UCD Choral Scholars Board of Management.[6]

References