Toru Takasuka
Toru Takasuka (高須賀 宣, Takasuka Tōru, born 1966) is a Japanese software entrepreneur.
Takasuka founded Cybozu, one of Japan's first Web-based groupware products. In 1997 with a $200,000 loan and two partners, Takasuka left his position as Vice President of Matsushita Electric Works V-Internet Operations in Osaka, Japan for the small city of Matsuyama, where he went to work developing Cybozu.[1] Japanese for "cyber-kid", Cybozu held an initial public offering within three years – at the time the fastest company rise to IPO in the history of Japan's Tosho 2 stock market. Today Cybozu is the number one groupware product in Japan.[2] In April 2005 Takasuka officially resigned his position as President and CEO at Cybozu to pursue his new vision for business collaboration on a more global level. In January 2006 Takasuka founded LUNARR, Inc. with his business partner, Hideshi Hamaguchi in Portland, Oregon, U.S.A.[3] He currently lives in Portland, Oregon and Tokyo, Japan.[4]
Personal history
Born (1966, Matsuyama, Ehime, Japan)[5]
Education
1990, B.S. in Engineering Management, Hiroshima Institute of Technology
Professional
Joins Matsushita Electric Works in 1990 in client-server networking and R&D. In 1994, develops Japan's first corporate Intranet with Hideshi Hamaguchi. In 1996, becomes Vice President/Director, V-Internet Operations Matsushita Electric Works, an in-house venture company he helped create.
Timeline
Leaves Matsushita Electric Works in 1997 to create Cybozu. Leaves Cybozu in 2005. January, 2006 creates LUNARR, Inc. in Portland, Oregon, U.S.A.
External links
References
- ^ Read, R. (2006, February 12). After Cashing In His Chips At Home, Japanese Upstart Reboots In Portland. The Oregonian, pp.1,2
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2007-08-20.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ LUNARR - Create. Flip. Share Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ http://www.dreamgate.gr.jp/feature/interview/bestlife/36/
- ^ LUNARR - Create. Flip. Share Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine