User:Davidwhittle
Tell us more about yourself This page is your user page. You are free to change it however and whenever you want. Just remember, it is your face towards the rest of the community and the world. You can always get back here by clicking on your user name at the very top of every page. |
Start editing Every one of Wikipedia's articles has been created by its readers. Click here to learn more about how quickly and easily you can help make Wikipedia better. As we say: Be bold! |
Personalize Wikipedia With your account, you can enhance your reading and editing experience by marking articles to watch as they evolve and adjusting your settings. |
About me
Click here to add an image of yourself (optional). Important information for minors |
Greetings - getting to the point, I'm an author, speaker, technologist, consultant, entrepreneur, and seventh-generation Latter-day Saint (Mormon).
I'm the author of Whittle, David B. (1997). Cyberspace: The Human Dimension. New York, NY: W.H. Freeman. ISBN 0-7167-8311-8., which was used by Duke and other universities as a textbook. I'm the co-author of Dvorak, John C.; Whittle, David B.; McElroy, Martin (1993). Dvorak's Guide to OS/2. New York, NY: Random House. ISBN 0-679-74648-X. , and was invited to be a contributing writer in Proctor, Maurine and Scot, ed. (1998). Charting A New Millennium: The Latter-Day Saints in the Coming Century. Salt Lake City, UT: Aspen Books. ISBN 1-56236-236-4., along with others such as Jack Anderson (Pulitzer prize winning investigative reporter), Jake Garn, Bob Bennett, and Orrin Hatch (Senators), Hyrum W. Smith (founder of FranklinQuest), Michael Leavitt (Governor of Utah and Secretary of Health & Human Services), Kieth Merrill (Academy Award-Winning Director), Richard L. Bushman (a leading Mormon historian at Columbia), and Truman G. Madsen (Mormon philosopher). I have also been a contributing writer to Smart Computing Magazine, Executive Excellence, the IBM PC Technical Journal, and the IBM Systems Selection Guide.
I've been featured or quoted in numerous national publications, including the Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington Post, the LA Times, USA Today, PC Week, PC Magazine, OS/2 Professional, CompuServe, Working Woman Magazine, and the Deseret News.
Working Woman quoted me alongside Google's Eric Schmidt as "one of America's most original technological thinkers."[1]
I've been a guest lecturer at Duke University and a guest speaker at over 800 venues on four continents and in forty states, including keynotes or featured addresses at Fenasoft in Sao Paulo in 1993, the International Trade Forum in Moscow in 1993, Comdex in Atlanta in 1994, and the Association of PC Users Groups in Cleveland in 2011.
I'm an expert on technology, particularly the Internet, and its impact on culture, business, government, and society. I specialize in business model strategy, viral growth, and the mechanisms of online influence.
I have also studied Mormonism and a wide variety of anti-Mormon literature extensively since my youth, and would like to help Wikipedia improve its accuracy and balance in this extraordinarily controversial arena as Mormons gain more and more attention on the U.S. and international stage.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Brame, Gloria "Seismic Shifts", Working Woman Magazine, June, 1996, pp. 29-33, accessed July 23, 2011