Speakers
- Brad Abrams
- Tom Ball
- David Boloker
- Ryan Breen
- Bob Byron
- Max Carlson
- Ludovic Champenois
- Patrick Chanezon
- Scott Davis
- Scott Dietzen
- Keith Donald
- Nicholas Eddy
- Cal Evans
- Jon Ferraiolo
- Neal Ford
- Thomas Fuchs
- Jesse James Garrett
- Nate Grover
- Aaron Gustafson
- Kevin Hakman
- Clint Hall
- Stuart Halloway
- Josh Holmes
- Molly Holzschlag
- Kevin Hoyt
- Bob Ippolito
- Bruce Johnson
- Sean Kane
- Nik Krimm
- Howard Lewis Ship
- Kevin Lynch
- Dustin Machi
- Matthew McCullough
- Steffen Meschkat
- Eric Miller
- Eric Miraglia
- William Morris
- Aaron Newton
- Vic Patterson
- Nandini Ramani
- Aza Raskin
- Torrey Rice
- Tom Robinson
- Rick Ross
- Alex Russell
- Christian Schalk
- Dylan Schiemann
- Matt Schmidt
- Nathaniel Schutta
- Bill Scott
- Scott Shattuck
- Deryk Sinotte
- Ken Sipe
- Brian Sletten
- Steve Souders
- Etienne Studer
- Venkat Subramaniam
- Tenni Theurer
- David Verba
- Rich Waters
- Dustin Whittle
- Mike Wilcox
- Greg Wilkins
- James Williams
- Chris Wilson
- Richard Worth
- Nicholas C. Zakas
- Kris Zyp
Chris Wilson
Program Manager of the Internet Explorer Platform at Microsoft
Chris Wilson is the group program manager of the Internet Explorer Platform at Microsoft. He's worked on web browsers since 1993, when he co-authored the first version of NCSA Mosaic for Windows. Since 1995, he's worked on Microsoft's web platform. In this 13-year-running saga, he's inflicted good (first implementation of Cascading Style Sheets in IE) and bad (overlapping <b> and <i> tags) on the world, and figures his karma will be even by 2012 the way he's going.
In his free time, he enjoys photography and hiking with his wife and one-year-old daughter, and scuba diving in the chilly waters of Puget Sound as a PADI Assistant Instructor. With any free money, he replaces the cameras he's destroyed by taking them underwater for dive photography. Occasionally he remembers to share his thoughts on his blog.
In his free time, he enjoys photography and hiking with his wife and one-year-old daughter, and scuba diving in the chilly waters of Puget Sound as a PADI Assistant Instructor. With any free money, he replaces the cameras he's destroyed by taking them underwater for dive photography. Occasionally he remembers to share his thoughts on his blog.