Dr. Glenn Ricart is an Internet pioneer and entrepreneur. He has worked in a variety of sectors, influencing the development of the Internet. He is the Founder and CTO of US Ignite, which is a national innovation ecosystem for the development and deployment of next-generation applications and services.[1]

Country: USA
LinkedIn:    Glenn Ricart
Twitter:    @gricart

Dr. Ricart is renowned for bringing the ARPANET protocols into academic and commercial use. While at the University of Maryland in the 1980s, he and his teams made the following innovations:

  • Created the first implementation of TCP/IP for the IBM PC
  • Created the first campus-wide TCP/IP network
  • Shipped and managed the software that powered the NSFnet, which was the first non-military TCP/IP national network
  • Created the first open Internet interchange point, the FIX and later MAE-EAST
  • Created the first operating NSFnet regional network, SURAnet.[2]

He is also the author of the algorithm for distributed mutual exclusion in operating systems, which has been cited hundreds of times in other scholarly papers.[3]

Career History

In 2013, Dr. Glenn Ricart became an adjunct professor at the University of Utah in addition to his work with US Ignite, which began in 2011. He was a Board Member and the Secretary of The Public Interest Registry from 2004 to 2011.[4] His previous positions have included President and CEO of National LambdaRail, Managing Director at PricewaterhouseCoopers Center for Advanced Research, Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer of CenterBeam, and Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer for Novell.

Glenn was a Board Member and Treasurer at Internet Society. He is a member of the Non-Commercial Users Constituency.

Glenn worked as a technology liaison to the Clinton White House and The Library of Congress.

Glenn attended ICANN 32 - Paris, ICANN 39 - Cartagena, and ICANN 35 - Sydney.

Start-ups

Dr. Ricart has been involved in the founding of several start-ups in addition to US Ignite: Consultants in Computer Technology, SURAnet, and CenterBeam. CenterBeam provides directory-based remote IT management services from San José but was sold to Earthlink in 2013 after 14 years of independent operation.[5][6]

References