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Interview with Elisabeth and Eric Freeman: October 17, 2004
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Source Computers in Entertainment (CIE) archive
Volume 3 ,  Issue 1  (Jan-March 2005) table of contents
COLUMN: Interviews with Bill Kinder (January 13, 2005) and Elisabeth and Eric Freeman (October 17, 2004) table of contents
Pages: 4 - 4  
Year of Publication: 2005
ISSN:1544-3574
Author
Newton Lee  The Walt Disney Company, Burbank, CA
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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APPENDICES and SUPPLEMENTS
The video file contains an interview with Elisabeth and Eric Freeman
The video file contains an interview with Elisabeth and Eric Freeman
The video file contains an interview with Elisabeth and Eric Freeman
The video file contains an interview with Elisabeth and Eric Freeman
The video file contains an interview with Elisabeth and Eric Freeman


ABSTRACT

Elisabeth Freeman is a software developer and digital artist. A strong advocate for women in computing, Elisabeth co-founded The Ada Project (TAP) - an award-winning website for resources for women in computing. In 1995, TAP became an official volunteer project of the ACM Committee on the Status of Women (http://women.acm.org/). Elisabeth led the R&D efforts in digital media at the Walt Disney Internet Group, where she co-invented Motion, a content system that delivers terabytes of video every day to Disney, ESPN, ABC, FamilyFun, and Movies.com users. She holds graduate degrees in computer science from Yale University and Indiana University. Eric Freeman is a computer scientist with a passion for media and software architectures. He directed the Internet broadband and wireless efforts at the Walt Disney Internet Group for four years. He studied computer science with David Gelernter at Yale University and received his Ph.D. in 1997. Eric implemented tuple-space systems on Thinking Machine CM-5s and created some of the first Internet information systems for NASA in the late 80s. Eric and Elisabeth are the coauthors of the new book Head First Design Patterns (O'Reilly, 2004).