![]() |
Contributors Christos J. P. Moschovitis was born and raised in Athens, Greece, the son of a prominent European journalist. He moved to the United States in 1979 to study Physics, Computer Science, and Mathematics, receiving his degree from the State University of New York in 1983. His graduate studies at the University of Rochester, and New York University include advanced courses in technology, management, and education. He was sworn-in as U.S. citizen in 1988 in New York City.
Christos moved to New York City from Rochester in 1985 and was appointed Director of Academic Computing at Pratt Institute where he headed the team that implemented five computer centers each with a distinct focus - Engineering, CAD/Architecture, Information Processing, Computer Graphics & Electronic Publishing, and Networking & Data Communications. In 1987 he was recruited by the O'Connor Group for the position of Vice President of Information Technology to establish the company's hardware, software, and local and wide area network infrastructure. There he headed a team of technologists in creating the necessary infrastructure enabling the company to efficiently manage over four billion dollars in assets nation-wide. In 1989 Christos started his own company - The Moschovitis Group, Inc. - focused on providing independent technology management expertise and outsourcing services. In 1992, he expanded one of the company's growing areas of expertise - computer graphics and electronic publishing - into a reference publishing division focused on the creation of reference products for the library and educational markets. At that point, the company was split into two subsidiaries: The Technology Management Group (TMG), and MTM Publishing. By the mid-1990s, with the emergence of the Internet into mainstream business, TMG concentrated much of its expertise on helping companies develop on-line strategies and deploy Internet technologies with a particular focus on usability and functionality. TMG further expanded its Internet offerings in 2004 by acquiring e*media, Inc. - a prominent, award wining, and internationally acclaimed interactive agency, forming tmg-emedia, inc. Currently, tmg-emedia boasts several prestigious clients in various sectors of the business, e-business, and non-profit world, as well as many acclaimed reference books and publishing projects. Examples include the Kellogg Corporation, Keebler, Del Monte, Bayer Pharmaceuticals, Citibank, Facts on File News Services, The National Underwriter Company, The Kress Foundation, National Cancer Institute, and The National Institutes of Health. Hilary Poole is a writer and editor specializing in high technology and the fine arts. She served as managing editor for Sexuality and Cyberspace: Performing the Digital Body, the 1996 issue of the journal Women and Performance. Hilary also served on the journal's Editorial Board for three years, and was a frequent editor and contributor. She is a graduate of Brown University. Tami Schuyler is a science writer and editor, focusing on technology and the life sciences. For two years, she served as Associate Editor for Today's Science On File, a monthly science-news digest for high school students, reporting on the latest developments in science, technology, medicine and the environment. Currently, Tami is a technical editor in the computer science field, and she is also a contributing writer to Lives and Legacies: Science (Oryx Press, 1999). Tami has a degree in Biology from University of California at Santa Cruz. Theresa M. Senft is a host at Echo Communications, a bulletin board system that has been called "The Algonquin Roundtable of Cyberspace." She has appeared as a speaker at the AT&T Communications Forum (George Washington University, Washington, D.C.); the Virtual Culture Seminar (Whitney Museum of Art, New York City) and the Mythologies of Territory Conference (St. Petersburg, Russia). In 1996 she edited Sexuality and Cyberspace: Performing the Digital Body, an issue of the journal Women and Performance; articles from the journal, which is available on the Web, are currently assigned reading in more than 20 universities. Theresa authored the "Baud Behavior" column on Prodigy Internet (1997-1998), and has been featured in The Village Voice and in Ends of Performance, an anthology published by NYU Press. She is a doctoral candidate in Performance Studies at New York University.
Website produced and maintained by tmg-e*media, inc. |