Val Overson, a former Utah lieutenant governor who's been a managing director at PricewaterhouseCoopers for the past three years, will become the Beehive State's next CIO. Overson's success in addressing complex challenges was cited by Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt as the reason for his nomination, which requires senate confirmation.
Speaking of technology talent, the Computer History Museum on Feb. 10 will present a panel discussion on "How Databases Changed the World." The panel will feature some of the biggest names in database development, including Roger Sipple, formerly of Informix, and Michael Stonebraker, a pioneer in relational databases who developed the technology that went into the Ingres database and Postgres, which became IBM's Universal Database technology.
Steve Case, the man who drove America Online, is out at AOL Time Warner-but not all the way out. Case will remain a member of the board and co-chair of its strategy committee. "Steve's extraordinary vision and unique experience will remain important assets to our entire company," said new AOL Time Warner chairman Dick Parsons, in a companywide E-mail last week.
The old Vision Thing-that and a buck-fifty will get you on the subway these days. Got a vision or an industry tip? Send it to jsoat@cmp.com or phone 516-562-5326. If you want to talk about IT as a corporate citizen or how databases changed the world, meet me at InformationWeek.com's Listening Post: informationweek.com/forum/johnsoat.
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