Alain Rossmann | |
---|---|
Born | 1956 (age 67–68) |
Alma mater | École Polytechnique École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées Stanford University |
Occupation(s) | Engineer, entrepreneur, executive |
Spouse | Joanna Hoffman |
Children | 2 |
Alain Simon Rossmann (born 1956 [1] ) is a French entrepreneur who was a member of the early Apple Macintosh team and who went on to found or co-found nine startups, of which three went public (Radius, [2] C-Cube Microsystems, [3] Unwired Planet [4] ), three were acquired (EO by AT&T, [5] Vudu by Walmart, [6] PSS Systems by IBM [7] ), and two were dissolved (Zonbu, [8] Klip [9] ). The ninth is his current company, Machinify. [10]
In 1979, Rossmann graduated at the École Polytechnique [11] [12] with a BS in mathematics and physics. He completed an MS in civil engineering at École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées [11] in 1981 and an MBA from Stanford University in 1983. [10]
Rossmann was head evangelist at the Macintosh division of Apple Computer from 1983 to 1986. [10] [13] [14] He worked with Joanna Hoffman and the couple subsequently married. [15] [16] Next, he founded Radius, a company that built Macintosh peripherals.
He was vice-president of marketing and sales from 1986 to 1989. [2] [10] Its IPO was in 1990. [17] He was vice-president of operations of C-Cube Microsystems, a leading developer of MPEG integrated circuits, from 1989 to 1992. [3] Its IPO was in 1994. It was acquired by LSI Logic in 2001. [18]
Moving into pen computing, Rossmann was CEO of EO from 1992 to 1994. It built and marketed the EO Personal Communicator. It was acquired by AT&T in 1993. [5] With his colleague Celeste Baranski, he won the Discover Award from Discover Magazine in 1993 for this product. [19] In an early smartphone development, he was founder and CEO of Unwired Planet (later renamed Phone.com, then Openwave, then back to Unwired Planet) from 1994 to 2001. It developed the Wireless Application Protocol for smartphone microbrowsers. [20] Its IPO was in 1999. [4] [21]
After Unwired Planet, he was founder and CEO then chairman of PSS Systems, an information lifecycle governance company, from June 2001 to October 2010. It was acquired by IBM in 2010. [7] His online movie service, Vudu, was acquired by Walmart. [6] He was founder and CEO from June 2005 to March 2010. [22] Next Rossmann was founder and chairman of Zonbu, subscription-based personal computer maker, from April 2006 to December 2007. [8]
From March 2011 to January 2015 he worked at Klip, Inc., a social video start up, as founder and CEO. [9] [10]
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Celeste Suzanne Baranski is an American electronic engineer, entrepreneur, and executive who helped create several pioneering electronic devices including early versions of the tablet computer. Baranski, with her colleague Alain Rossmann, won the Discover Award from Discover Magazine in 1993.
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1986 Radius: Mike Boich, Burrell Smith, Alain Rossmann, Andy Hertzfeld
Alain Rossmann, C-Cubed's vice president,
In five years, ALAIN ROSSMANN's Phone.com (PHCM), formerly known as Unwired Planet, ... Phone.com stock has soared 1,500%, to around $130, since its June initial public offering.
In 2008, Vudu's chief executive left the company and was replaced by Alain Rossmann, a co-founder who was an early Apple executive and a pioneer in making the Web accessible from cellphones.
That led him and Mr. Rossmann, a former Apple executive who has started many Silicon Valley companies, to pursue the possibility of creating an appliancelike computer tailored to consumers who have no computer expertise.
Rossmann on Tuesday unveiled Klip, a new startup...
"We all live in the world that Steve invented," says Alain Rossmann, who worked with Jobs at Apple in the mid-1980s.
Rossmann was an Apple evangelist under Steve Jobs during the development of the first Macintosh computer.
She is married to Alain Rossmann, another former member of the Mac team and longtime Silicon Valley entrepreneur
Alain Rossmann Phone.com +81,547,200 630,631,477
In the dot-com boom, he served as CEO of mobile browser start-up OpenWave, formerly Phone.com, which launched one of the sizzling-hot IPOs of the era.
'This shift can look very slow in the beginning and very sudden at some moment in the future,' says Alain Rossmann, a Silicon Valley veteran and the chairman of Vudu.