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Donald
B. Means, Founder and Principal
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With over 20 years experience in the IT industry, Means is co-founder and principal of
Digital Village Associates, a 13-year old consulting enterprise that focuses on information /communications technology as both tool and subject for building local communities everywhere.
In June of 2007, Means authored the "Fiber to the Library" proposal to make
connecting every library in the US with 100+Mbps level connectivity by 2010
a national goal.
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In July of 2007, Means announced Digital Village would coordinate the formation of an open consortium
to stage the National Presidential Caucus on Dec. 7, 2007. The NPC's goal is for 1,000's of self-organizing groups to gather in local face to face caucuses to discuss and deliberate on the issues and candidates in advance of the official primary season.
In early 2005, Means and Digital Village originated and facilitated implementation of the Community TeleStructure Initiative, a powerful national consortium to advocate for a new local responsibility for telecom/broadband infrastructure planning and development in a similar fashion as with other local infrastructure elements like power, transportation, water, etc.
In 2003/2004, Means formally held the position of Senior Political Advisor to Meetup.com,
a community-building Web service with millions of members that provides an organizing tool for
like-interested people, enabling them to gather off-line in localities anywhere in the world.
Means has served as an appointed member of the Information Technology
Commission of California;
as chair of the Information Technology
Association of America’s education outreach program; and as
a member of TechNet, a public policy organization of over
200 technology CEO's where he has worked on normalizing trade relations with
China, education restructuring in California, and national broadband policy.
Means is co-founder and board member of TriWorks
Corp. of Tokyo & Shanghai.
TriWorks is a 9 year old software and services company specializing
in "Digital Image Communications" for a range of consumer
and commercial applications. Its flagship product, DigiBook™, is
the market leading photo album software
in Japan.
In 1985, Means founded the National Space Sciences Educational Foundation,
a
nonprofit educational services corporation. NSSEF designed and implemented
experimental learning environments located
at Stanford University for high
school age students from the United States and Europe called the Space Sciences
Academy™.
Holding a finance degree from Southern Methodist University, Means
has
also studied architecture and environmental design at the University of Texas
and
international business relations at the University of Graz, Austria.
Reared in Ft. Worth, Texas, Means lives in Sausalito, California
with his wife, Dominique
Caron,
a professional artist, originally
from France.
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