Jump to content

Mark Pesce

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Hackertrips (talk | contribs) at 00:04, 30 January 2021 (Career). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Mark D. Pesce
Mark Pesce in Australia
Mark Pesce at LCA2011 in Brisbane, Australia
Born (1962-12-08) December 8, 1962 (age 61)
Everett, Massachusetts, United States
NationalityAmerican
Australian
Occupation(s)author, researcher, engineer, futurist and teacher
Known forco-inventor of VRML

Mark D. Pesce (/ˈpɛʃi/ PESH-ee; born 1962) is an American-Australian author, researcher, engineer, futurist and teacher.

Early life

Pesce was born in Everett, Massachusetts in 1962. In September 1980, Pesce attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) for a Bachelor of Science degree, but left in June 1982 to pursue opportunities in the newly emerging high-tech industry. He worked as an engineer for the next few years, developing prototype firmware and software for SecurID cards.

Career

In 1988, Pesce joined Shiva Corporation, which pioneered and popularized dial-up networking. Pesce's role in the company was to develop user interfaces, and his research extended into virtual reality.[1]

In 1991, Pesce founded the Ono-Sendai Corporation, named after a fictitious company in the William Gibson novel Neuromancer.[2] Ono-Sendai was a first-generation virtual reality startup, chartered to create inexpensive, home-based networked VR systems. The company developed a key technology, which earned Pesce his first patent for a "Sourceless Orientation Sensor" that tracks the motion of persons in virtual environments. Sega Corporation of America would use the technology on the design of the Sega VR, a consumer head-mounted display (HMD).[1]

In 1993, Apple hired Pesce as a consulting engineer to develop interfaces between Apple and IBM networking products.[3] In early 1994, while in San Francisco, Pesce, with software engineers Tony Parisi and Gavin Bell, spearheaded an effort to standardize 3D on the Web, and formed VRML Architecture Group (VAG), under the leadership of Pesce.[4] The purpose of VRML was to allow for the creation of 3D environments within the World Wide Web, accessible through a web browser. Working in conjunction with such corporations as Microsoft, Netscape, Silicon Graphics, Sun Microsystems and Sony, Pesce convinced the industry to accept the new protocol as a standard for desktop virtual reality.[5] This development spring-boarded Pesce into a career which has included extensive writings for both the popular and scientific press, teaching and lecturing at universities, conferences, performances, presentations, and films appearances.

Australia

In 2003, Pesce relocated to Australia, where he continues to live, and became an Australian citizen on 4 February 2011.[6] He is an Honorary Lecturer at the University of Sydney and was a judge on The New Inventors, a nationally televised program in Australia.

In 2006, Pesce founded FutureSt, a Sydney consultancy, serving as an advisory to analytic's firm PeopleBrowsr, and The Serval Project.[7]

In 2008, Pesce began writing an online column for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's The Drum Opinion.[8]

More recently Pesce has been designing and coding Plexus,[9] a Web 2.0 address book and social networking tool, and is writing his next book, The Next Billion Seconds.[10] His current major project, however, is Light MooresCloud,[11] an ambient device of 52-LEDs which is a lamp with a LAMP-stack;[12] the trademark pays homage to the inexpensive ubiquitous computing engendered by Moore's Law. Inspired by the GPIO of a borrowed Raspberry Pi, which he realized allowed web users anywhere on the planet to turn an LED on or off on his machine from their browsers, MooresCloud was brought from concept to prototype by a team in eight weeks.[13] Highly configurable, the device has been touted as "illumination as a service".[14]

From January 2004 through January 2006, Pesce was the senior lecturer in Emerging Media and Interactive Design at the Australian Film Television and Radio School (AFTRS) in Sydney, Australia. He now holds an Honorary Appointment at the University of Sydney and has shared some of his lectures online.[15]

Other teaching

Pesce began his teaching career in 1996 as a VRML instructor at both the University of California at Santa Cruz and San Francisco State University, where he would later create the school's certificate program in the 3-D Arts. In 1998, Pesce was asked to join the faculty of the University of Southern California, as the founding chair of the Graduate Program in Interactive Media at the USC School of Cinema-Television.[16]

Books

  • Mark Pesce, Programming DirectShow and Digital Video. Seattle, Washington, Microsoft Press, May 2003.
  • Mark Pesce, The Playful World: How Technology Transforms our Imagination. New York, Ballantine Books (Random House), October 2000.
  • Mark Pesce, Learning VRML: Design for Cyberspace. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Ziff-Davis Publishing, 1997.
  • Mark Pesce, VRML: Flying through the Web. Indianapolis, Indiana: New Riders Publishing, 1996.
  • Mark Pesce, VRML: Browsing and Building Cyberspace. Indianapolis, Indiana: New Riders Publishing, 1995.
  • Introduction to Celia Pearce, The Interactive Book. Indianapolis, Indiana: Macmillan Technical Publishing, 1997.

Film projects

  • Man With a Movie Tube, short form video, January 2007
  • Unbomb, short form video, August 2003.
  • Body Hits (BBC 3), location producer, November 2002.
  • This Strange Eventful History, feature length video about Burning Man, August 2002
  • Becoming Transhuman, feature length video, inspired by Terence McKenna and others, August 2001

References

  1. ^ a b Pesce, Mark. "Curriculum Vitae" (PDF). hyperreal.org. Mark Pesce. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
  2. ^ https://uploadvr.com/flashback-tony-parisi-on-co-creating-the-virtual-reality-markup-language-vrml-for-the-web-in-the-1990s/
  3. ^ MARKOFF, JOHN (November 25, 1996). "A New Language Is Adding Depth to the Flat Computer Screen". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  4. ^ MARKOFF, JOHN (July 16, 1996). "Tomorrow, the World Wide Web!;Microsoft, the PC King, Wants to Reign Over the Internet". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  5. ^ David Livingstone, "Transhumanism: The History of a Dangerous Idea", pages 290-291
  6. ^ Pesce, Mark. "Mateship and becoming Aussie". ABC.net.au. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  7. ^ "Creativity | Insight | Inspiration". markpesce.com. Archived from the original on 17 May 2012. Retrieved 21 August 2011.
  8. ^ "Mark Pesce - The Drum Opinion". ABC.net.au. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  9. ^ Bauwens, Michel (8 August 2010). "Why we need a wikileaks for social media: Marke Pesce on the launching of the Plexus project". blog.p2pfoundation.net. P2P Foundation. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  10. ^ Pesce, Mark. "The Next Billion Seconds". Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  11. ^ http://www.afr.com/f/free/technology/digitallife/australian_startup_reinvents_the_LrNIW5n4mlxctY0GwOclpM
  12. ^ "MooresCloud Light runs Linux, puts LAMP on your lamp (Video)".
  13. ^ "VR pioneer invents 'illumination-as-a-service'".
  14. ^ "Linux-based Lamp offers 'illumination as a service'".
  15. ^ "Mark Pesce's videos". vimeo.com. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  16. ^ "USC IN THE NEWS". usc.edu. USC NEWS. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 21 August 2011.