Speakers and Session Chairs


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Professor Matthew Bailes

Professor Matthew Bailes is the founding Director of the Swinburne Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing. He graduated from ANU with a PhD in Astronomy in 1989 and went on to postdoctoral positions at Goddard Space Flight Center, Maryland, USA, the University of Manchester, UK, the CSIRO (Australia) and Melbourne University.

The Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing is dedicated to inspiring a fascination in the Universe through research and education. It runs one of the world's largest Internet courses in Astronomy and has public outreach facilities in Parkes NSW, Sydney Observatory, Melbourne Museum (the Virtual Room), Jodrell Bank Observatory (UK) and South Korea. It also possesses a large supercomputing cluster comprising 350 Xeon and Pentium 4 processors with a theoretical peak of 2.0 64 bit Teraflops.


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Michael Boland

Michael Boland is a Distinguished Systems Engineer with Cisco Systems, Australia and New Zealand. He has 23 years experience in the Australian and New Zealand communications industry, and has experienced life as an end user, integrator and supplier of communications products.

Michael began his career as an application programmer for Tooheys Limited, a large multinational Australian corporation, where he worked for six and a half years on commercial, industrial systems and networking applications. He then moved on to the network integration company Network Solutions Australia, designing and supporting data networks for large corporate and government customers for a further six and a half years. Michael joined Cisco as a Systems Engineer (SE) in 1993, and was soon promoted to SE Manager shortly after his appointment. With the rapid growth of Cisco Systems, Michael evolved to a Senior Consulting Engineer, solving business communications problems for large enterprise, government and service provider customers.

In May 2000, in recognition of his technical leadership and achievements, Michael was awarded the position of Distinguished Systems Engineer - the highest field position for Systems Engineers within Cisco Systems. Now in his 12th year with Cisco Systems, Michael focuses in developing solutions for Cisco carrier and service provider customers, specializing in access network architectures and technologies and Lawful Interception services.


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M. Sean Casey

Sean Casey has over 13 years experience at Intel, and currently manages the Communications Group, Wireless Computing and Communications, for Intel in Australia and New Zealand. Intel has invested over $10B on communications technologies, focused on the design of communications equipment based on Intel's silicon and system products, ranging from wireless, optical, embedded Intel Architecture, Xscale mirco processors and flash memory.

Sean originally joined Intel Corporation in Folsom, California, as a design engineer on the Intel 486 DX4100 in 1992. Two years later, he moved to Intel's flash memory team as a technical marketing engineer, working to define a new form factor for flash memory cards. In 1996, Sean moved to Singapore to help establish Intel's channel programs within Asia-Pacific emerging markets such as Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Vietnam and Pakistan.

He joined the Intel Australia channel marketing team in 1998, supporting Intel Architecture products (processors, servers, mobile, motherboards) and training local channel members on the latest technologies from Intel. Sean has four US patents for flash memory card design and a USB pager. He has a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from Purdue University in Indiana, USA.


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Narelle Clark

Ms Narelle Clark is a data communications and Internet specialist who has been working in advanced technology areas consistently throughout her career. Back in the early days of the Australian Internet she was responsible for development and operation of university campus networks, research labs and medical and Internet software projects. A firm believer in relevant technology, she also runs an on-line parenting support group and is a member of the steering committee for the group Females in Information Technology & Telecommunications.

Now in the role of Manager, Research and Development, in the new technology analysis group of Optus Networks Division, she has been a user, builder, manager and researcher of Internet networks and services since 1986. She has been an Optus employee since 1998, during which time she has played a key technical and management role in a number of major Internet projects. Prior to that she was data network manager at Vodafone, and earlier spent many years in the university sector building and operating campus networks, primarily within UTS and AARNet's NSW RNO. She holds a bachelors degree in physics and a masters in telecommunications and information systems engineering, and is currently completing a graduate diploma in management.


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Dr Patrick Cregan

Dr Patrick Cregan is currently Clinical Director of Surgery, Wentworth Area Health Service; Chair Surgical Services Committee NSW Dept of Health; Visiting Surgeon, Nepean Hospital, Nepean Private Hospital, Springwood Hospital; Chair of the Virtual Critical Care Unit (ViCCU) Project, and Member Board of Directors NSW Cancer Institute.

His current research interests are:
* Surgical robotics: he was the first person in Australia and sixth in the world to perform a telesurgical procedure in 1998. He has been working with the College and the University of Western Sydney on remote laparoscopic surgical procedures.
* High performance computing: he is a member of the Management Committee for the Penrith Node of the New South Wales High Performance Computing (AC3) Collaboration. This group is seeking to develop a virtual environment based on parallel processing systems as a specific target within the AC3 boundaries.
* Hapto-Visual environments: as part of the Skills Laboratory Development and research undertaken by the CSIRO for the use of Hapto-Visual environments in surgical education, he is an active participant with the eHealth Group of CSIRO, working in particular with the CMIS group at CSIRO at ANU in Canberra and the TIPS group at Marsfield in Sydney.
* CeNTIE: he is a member of the medical advisory group to this endeavour, and is seeking, in his Area Director's role, to develop broad-band Internet capabilities to support smaller hospitals which are unable to obtain the critical mass necessary to maintain and deliver appropriate levels of skills in smaller hospitals, both district and rural. * The ViCCU Project: he is currently supervising in part a PhD student in Medicine at U Sydney working on Hapto-visual and Virtual Reality tools in Surgical Training. He has been asked to assess projects in this field both locally and from the University of Singapore.


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Paul Davis

Paul Davis has been the Director of GrangeNet since August 2002. Prior to joining GrangeNet he was the CTO of ac3 (the Australian Centre for Advanced Computing and Communications) and responsible for the technical development of one of Australia's foremost high performance computing centres.

Paul spent 25 years in scientific-based computation, the last twelve years of which involved supercomputing. He was Head of IT with the Biomolecular Research Institute where he built and managed several supercomputing facilities, and IT Manager at CSIRO Division of Molecular Science. He was one of CSIRO's most senior divisional IT managers. Paul has an international reputation in high performance computing, having presented invited papers at conferences in the UK, Europe, Japan and USA.


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Robin Eckermann

Robin Eckermann's career began in Canberra as a programmer in 1973. In 1981 he established his own software consulting practice, concentrating on the new approaches to software architecture that were enabled by the introduction of desktop computing. In the nineties, he discovered the potential of broadband technology and became convinced that the world sat at the threshold of a revolution in communications that would transform the way people live and work.

Of particular significance amongst the consulting projects undertaken was Robin's role with the ACT Electricity and Water Authority in leading development of the TransACT broadband initiative from a blank sheet of paper to a fully funded company in 2000, later serving as Chief Architect. TransACT has been recognised internationally as Australia's leading broadband network, delivering a voice, data and video services over 50 Mbps connections to tens of thousands of customers in Canberra.

Since 2002 Robin has been consulting in the fields of broadband infrastructure and services throughout Australia as well as in overseas countries such as the UK, Belgium, India, New Zealand and Canada. Increasingly projects are centred on the challenge of finding viable fibre-to-the-home models. Robin is one of Australia's leading broadband visionaries and practitioners.


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Simon Hackett

Simon Hackett is the founder and CEO of national broadband ISP Internode and broadband infrastructure builder Agile.

Simon graduated from, and then worked at, the University of Adelaide in the 80's. He was one of the folk who helped to build version 1 of AARNet while at the University. He contributed to the development of IETF standards in the areas of audio and video transport, and built one of the world's first SNMP controlled Internet toasters. He left the University to found Internode in 1991 and later founded Agile in 1997.

In September 2004, Simon won the Bulletin Magazine 'Smart 100' prize in the IT&T category. When he isn't building broadband thingies, Simon is most likely to be found flying his sailplane.


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René Hatem

René Hatem is Chief Engineer for Canada's advanced Internet development organisation, CANARIE. There, for the greater part of the last 10 years, he has been exposed to, and participated in the building of community, regional, and national-scope data networks, both within Canada and internationally.

In his current position René coordinates with Canadian regional advanced networks on network design and technical policies and oversees the engineering and day-day operational management of the CA*net 4 network infrastructure and its operations centre.


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Tony Hill

Tony Hill became President of the Internet Society of Australia in December 2001 having previously been the Society's first Executive Director during 2000 and 2001. ISOC-AU is the Australian Chapter of the worldwide Internet Society, which is the umbrella organisation for Internet technical standards and architecture. Over these two years, ISOC-AU grew in line with the popularity of the Internet to represent more than 40,000 Australian Internet users through its organisational and individual members. Now ISOC-AU is a respected voice in policy development and public debate providing sound technical understanding of the Internet from its professional membership with a broad users perspective. Tony has been an enthusiastic user since 1994 when he established the first Internet connection into the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet.

Tony has established his own consulting business, Capital Hill Consulting Pty Ltd, that provides high-level advice on large-scale research funding, strategic research management and challenging collaboration issues. He was formerly Manager of the Cooperative Research Centres (CRC) Program in the Department of Industry, Science and Resources. He has been involved in strategic research management since 1991. His 20-year career in the Australian Public Service has spanned seven Commonwealth agencies, including Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, and working for Ministers on both sides of politics.

His academic study includes economics and geography at the undergraduate level, and a Masters of Environmental Studies. In 1994, he completed a Graduate Certificate in Public Sector Management.


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Dr Kate Lance

Kate Lance studied physics at London University and holds a PhD in astronomy from the Australian National University. In 1988 she moved into the fledgling Internet world as a Unix system administrator at the CSIRO Division of Radiophysics and at the University of Newcastle. She worked from 1996 to 2000 as System Manager and Director of Internet Services at the pioneering Internet service provider Connect.

In 1996 she helped set up ISOC-AU and was on the board for five years, two of them as President, and since 2002 has been Executive Director of the Society. She maintains the ISOC-AU website, and is the author of Redbill: From Pearls to Peace - the Life and Times of a Remarkable Lugger (2004, Fremantle Arts Centre Press).


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Lee In-Ho

Mr Lee In-Ho holds degrees in Bachelor of Technology, Industrial Engineering, and Master of Technology, Industrial Engineering. Since 1986 he has worked for Korea Telecom (now KT), starting in research on Quality and Reliability Assurance programs in telecommunications. He was on the task force team for US-Korea Special Planning Group telecommunications talks, then became Director of the Overseas Business Group in 1990, planning foreign investment and projects.

Mr Lee became Vice-President for Business Development, KT Philippines in 1995, involved in expansion programs for Filipino telecommunications companies. In 2000 he became Director for Internet Business Planning, Internet Business Center, which set up KT's global network, providing services to multinational companies and interconnection with foreign ISPs.

In 2002 Mr Lee was appointed Assistant Vice-President, Global Business Center, managing overseas investment, subsidiaries and offices, and in 2004 he moved to the Management Research Lab, working on research in policy and regulatory issues.


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Dr Philip McCrea

Philip McCrea has over 32 years experience in the Australian IT industry, spanning both academia and commerce. After being awarded a PhD in Computer Science from the University of NSW in 1975, he held various lecturing posts in the UK, Canada and Australia. He left academic life in 1986 to join AAP Reuters Communications as Software Development Manager, and in 1988 became Managing Director of Softway Pty Ltd, a Sydney based software company.

In 1994 he joined CSIRO Mathematical and Information Sciences as a business development manager, and regularly consulted to industry and government in the area of internet commerce. Philip left CSIRO in 2000 to become CEO of ac3, a startup company providing high performance computing and data centre services to industry, commerce, government and academia.


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Mark D. Pesce

Internationally recognized as the man who brought virtual reality into the World Wide Web in 1994 with VRML, Mark Pesce has been exploring the frontiers of media, science and technology for over two decades. In September of 1998, Pesce received two-year appointment as Visiting Professor and Chair of the Interactive Media Program at the University of Southern California's world-renowned School of Cinema-Television. His mandate - to bring cinema and broadcast television into the interactive era - led him to create a program that encourages creative vision, and is already producing a generation of entertainment professionals shaping the media of the 21st century.

Early in 2004, the Australian Film Television and Radio School appointed Pesce as Lecturer in Interactive Media, and early in 2005 the master's program in Interactive Media, which he oversees, admitted its first student. Later this year, Pesce's sixth book will be published. hyperpeople explores the explosive superdistribution of digital media through file-sharing networks, which, when combined with the growing power of mobile digital social networks, will completely transform human communication.


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Professor Farzad Safaei

Farzad Safaei graduated from the University of Western Australia with the degree of Bachelor of Engineering and obtained his PhD in Telecommunications Engineering from Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. He has more than 15 years of experience in conducting and managing advanced research in the field of data communications and networks. Currently, he is the Professor of Telecommunications Engineering and Director of Centre for Emerging Networks and Applications at the University of Wollongong.

Professor Safaei is also the Program Manager of Smart Networks and Intelligent Environment program at the Smart Internet Technology Cooperative Research Centre. Before joining the University of Wollongong, he was the Manager of Internetworking Architecture and Services Section in Telstra Research Laboratories. His primary research interest is to design large-scale telecommunication networks that can adapt autonomously to dynamic characteristics of applications, cost, customer demand, or any other critical influence from outside.


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Professor Darrell Williamson

Professor Williamson is the Chief Executive Officer for the Smart Internet Technology Cooperative Research Centre. He has degrees in Science and Electrical Engineering from the University of Newcastle, and a Doctoral degree in Applied Mathematics from Harvard University. He has held various academic appointments at the University of New South Wales, the Australian National University and the University of Wollongong. He was foundation Professor and Head of the Department of Engineering, Faculty of Engineering & Information Technology, ANU and then Dean of the Faculty.

Later he became Chief Executive Officer for the Cooperative Research Centre in Advanced Computational Systems, and subsequently, Director of the Telecommunications & Information Technology Research Institute at the University of Wollongong. Professor Williamson has held visiting appointments at various universities in Europe and the USA, and has published widely in the fields of telecommunications, signal processing and control. He has served on various CRC Boards and advisory committees including the Information Industries Development Board of the ACT Government and the National Advisory Committee of Item3 Pty Ltd.