Jeromy Carriere

Steven Jeromy Carrière is a Canadian computer software engineer.

Carrière is a graduate of the University of Waterloo in Canada. He was technical staff member at Carnegie Mellon University's Software Engineering Institute working on practical software architectural reconstruction and analysis.[1]

In 1998 Carrière co-founded Pittsburgh-based voice portal infrastructure company Quackware with Steven Woods and Alex Quilici. In 1999 Quackware became Quack.com and moved to Silicon Valley. In September 2000, Quack was acquired for an estimated $200 million by America Online.[2]

Carrière left America Online in 2002 to co-found Web 2.0 startup Kinitos (later renamed NeoEdge Networks). In 2003, Jeromy left Kinitos to join Microsoft as a senior architect advisor. From 2005 through 2007 he worked for Fidelity Investments, in Boston, USA, in their enterprise application architecture group. Subsequent to this Jeromy went on to senior technical leadership positions with Vistaprint, Yahoo, eBay and most recently - Google where he has been an Engineering Director in its technical infrastructure group since 2012.

Jeromy has been the recipient of numerous awards. In June 2007 Carrière was awarded an honorary doctorate from Algoma University College in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada.[3]

In spring of 2014 Carrière was recognized with the prestigious J.W. Graham Medal for Computing and Innovation by the University of Waterloo.[4]

Notes

  1. "Jeromy Carrière partial bibliography at DBLP". DBLP. Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  2. Andrew M. Seybold (30 September 2000). "Voice: The Killer App". Andrew Seybold's Outlook. Archived from the original on 11 May 2009. Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  3. David Helwig (10 June 2007). "Algoma University College presented an honorary doctor of science degree to Steven Jeromy Carriere". Soo Today. Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  4. "J.W. Graham Medal and past recipients".
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gollark: So, apart from the fact that for some reason some slots don't actually fill themselves when crafting (why?!) it mostly works.
gollark: Is it particularly type-safe?
gollark: I am seriously considering it.
gollark: Basically, it seems very much as if stuff autocrafts, then it vanishes.
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