Nikolaj Nyholm

Nikolaj Nyholm (born 13 September 1975) is a Danish serial technology entrepreneur and investor from Copenhagen, Denmark. He has founded four technology startups that have pioneered different domains, is an advisor to Minecraft creator Mojang, as a partner at the venture capital investor, Sunstone Capital, and is currently the founder and CEO at Astralis Group, an operator of professional esports teams such as Astralis and Origen.

Nikolaj Nyholm
Born (1975-09-13) 13 September 1975
Occupation
  • Businessman
  • investor
  • entrepreneur
TitleCEO of Astralis Group

Nyholm founded Speednames (later renamed Ascio Technologies) in 1999 and sold the company to London AIM-listed Group NBT in January 2007 for $36 million.[1] In 2003, Nyholm founded Organic Network, a provider of managed Wi-Fi systems to large ISPs. The company was liquidated in late 2005, after having created the successful open source Wi-Fi firmware project OpenWrt, which now powers companies like FON.

After Organic Network, Nyholm spent a year as European evangelist for O'Reilly Media, Tim O'Reilly's tech publisher and conference organizer. There he co-organized the European Open Source Conference,[2] among other accomplishments. While at O'Reilly, Nyholm co-founded Imity, a mobile social radar, which was acquired by ZYB, and later by Vodafone, for $50 million.[3]

Nyholm then became the CEO of image recognition company Polar Rose, sold to Apple for a rumored $29 million.[4] In 2008, Nyholm and Polar Rose were named Technology Pioneers by the World Economic Forum.[5]

In January 2010, Nyholm joined venture capital firm Sunstone Capital as a partner. Additionally, Nyholm is a frequent speaker at technology conferences such as DLD,[6] PICNIC,[7] and O'Reilly Etech.[8]


Personal life

He married former Finnish supermodel Niina Kurkinen in August 2017.[9]

gollark: What is your point? It has to store data SOMEHOW.
gollark: But really, why *not* have SQLite3? It... stores data, it has transactions, it's very well-tested, it satisfies the requirements of Protocol APIO-A33ρ.
gollark: I think systemd actually does roughly that, but with targets.
gollark: I mean, yes, I *could* just use a folder of "services" and a folder of "enabled services" and some symlinks, and that *would* probably work.
gollark: Oh, I have a fun idea, I can use SQLite3 for storing data like which services are enabled.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.