2014 Schedule
Interactive: March 7–11  •  Film: March 7–15  •  Music: March 11–16

Humanity 2.0: What Are We Becoming?

#sxsw #byronreese

It is the vanity of every age to believe they live at the turning point of human civilization. Having said that, we must acknowledge we are living at the great turning point of human civilization. Technology isn't just changing the world, it is changing us. With nano, robotics, connectivity, mobile, expanded processing capability, enhanced data collection through sensors, and a thousand more things, humanity is about to experience a radical change. What does it mean to be human? Are we machines? How is all this change happening, and where will it ultimately end up?

Presenters

5996

Byron Reese

CEO

Knowingly

Byron Reese employs his profound understanding of technical data to illuminate how the technology of today can solve many global challenges. He speaks with the unrivaled authority of an accomplished high-tech trailblazer, inventor, and entrepreneur; and the wisdom of a life-long historian. “The new challenge for humanity will not be how to chip away at the old problems,” says Byron, “but what to do in a world where we can do anything.”

Byron has been building and running Internet and software companies for twenty years. Byron has been associated with five early stage companies. Three have been sold and two have gone public. He is presently working on his sixth one, Knowingly.

In addition to serving in a wide range of senior management roles, from CEO to VP of Marketing to Chief Innovation Officer, Byron has produced diverse body of patentable work, authored an award-winning book about the future of technology, and given dozens of talks to both technical and non-technical audiences around the world.

Bloomberg Businessweek credits Byron with having “quietly pioneered a new breed of media company.” Wired Magazine describes him as “a tall Texan who serves as Demand’s chief innovation officer and who created the idea-spawning algorithm that lies at the heart of Demand’s process.” The Financial Times of London reported that he “is typical of the new wave of internet entrepreneurs out to turn the economics of the media industry on its head.” And Business Insider concluded that Byron “seems like a kooky – and awesome guy… We’d love to buy him a beer.”

In addition, Byron and his work has been featured in hundreds of news outlets, including New York Times, Washington Post, Entrepreneur Magazine, USA Today, Reader’s Digest, NPR, and the LA Times Magazine.

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