After modifying our daily relationship with the computer with the web, then with telephony and television services with telephony and television on IP, permanent broadband access to internet networks opens the way to a profound revolution of everyday objects.
Increasing the capacities of an object by network resources
is giving it access to infinite calculation and storage capacities without increasing the cost. The object's interfaces are also ported to appliances like mobile phones or computers, to benefit from their resources
as well as the associated network platform
and software applications associated with these objects.
49 years old, Eric first worked in institutional research as a researcher in the field of radio.
He then jointly founded Inventel and was president from 2002 to 2005, being one of the major architects of Triple Play in Europe.
After Inventel was bought by Thomson, he became technical director of Thomson's domestic product division.
He created and managed the Advanced Product Development group within this division.
Eric is an Engineer from the Industrial Physics and Chemistry Grande Ecole in Paris (ESPCI) and has a PhD in engineering from the university of Paris VI. He is the author of fifty or so patents.
32 years old, he accumulated 8 years experience in marketing general public technological products.
After joining Inventel as product manager where he managed the launch of residential wireless gateways, he help at Thomson in the position of marketing director of domestic products in charge of developing residential offers.
Engineer at the Ecole Centrale of Paris and holder of a Masters from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), distinguished best Product manager of the Thomson group in 2006.
From 1998 to 2008, as founder and technical director of Cirpack, he developed telephone switching equipment that are today at the heart of the networks of hundreeds of operators, including for example, Free.fr.
During this decade he played an important role in the world deployment of telephony over the internet.
He is a graduate of Télécom Paris and holds a PhD in
micro-electronics.