Philippe Kahn
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Philippe Kahn (born March 16, 1952)[1] is an American technology innovator and entrepreneur, French-born, known as the founder of Borland, a producer of software development tools for as well as Starfish Software, the creator of the first wireless synchronization solutions and LightSurf Technologies the developer of the first camera phone infrastructure. Kahn created the first complete camera phone[2] system in 1997. He is currently the CEO of Fullpower Technologies, a company which provides solutions converging life sciences, wireless technology, nanotechnology and MEMS.
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[edit] Education and early days
Kahn was educated at ETH Zurich, Switzerland (Swiss Federal Polytechnic Institute), and University of Nice, France. Kahn received a masters in mathematics. He also studied musicology and classical flute at the Zurich Music Conservatory in Switzerland.[3]
In 1973, as a student, Kahn developed the software for the MICRAL, the earliest non-kit personal computer based on a microprocessor. The MICRAL was marketed for vertical applications, and is now credited by The Computer Museum as the first ever personal computer.[4]
Kahn is married to Sonia Lee, who co-founded LightSurf and Fullpower Technologies. They raise four children. Together, they run an environmental charity, the Lee-Kahn Foundation. Kahn is known for his passion for classical music and he plays the flute semi-professionally. Furthermore he is very competitive in sailboat racing and leads his sailing team Pegasus Racing. He supports freedom of speech.
[edit] Business
Kahn has founded four software companies: Borland, Starfish Software (acquired by Motorola in 1998), LightSurf Technologies (acquired by Verisign in 2005), and recently Fullpower Technologies, founded in 2003.
[edit] Borland (1982-1995)
Realizing that even innovation such as the MICRAL would not be commercially viable in Europe, Kahn arrived in the US as a tourist in 1982 and won a job with Hewlett-Packard, subsequently losing it because of his undocumented status. After a period of consulting activities, he set up Borland International, although he was still not a legal U.S. resident at the time.[5] After four years in the U.S. on a tourist visa, Kahn was granted a Green Card in 1986. He is today a naturalized U.S. citizen.[6] He came to Silicon Valley without many possesions. This has been a subject of discussion as he was a highly educated immigrant and already recognized for his technology achievements.
Borland's first commercial success was Turbo Pascal, immediately followed by the first desktop organizer, SideKick. Borland went on to have a line of PC development tools, as well as a suite of office products that were in direct competition with Microsoft and Lotus/IBM. Borland filed its IPO in London in 1986, successfully, followed by secondary offerings in the US in 1989 and 1991. Philippe Kahn, the inventor and technologist, had become a successful high-tech business executive.
Borland competed with Microsoft in the 80s and early 90s. President, CEO, and Chairman of Borland since inception and taking Borland without venture capital from no revenues to a $500 million run-rate, Kahn and the Borland board came to a disagreement on how to focus the company. Kahn was forced to resign by the Borland board from his position as CEO in January 1995.[7] However, he remained on the board as a director until November 1996, showing support and loyalty in the adversity until he finally resigned from that position.[8] Kahn had been the President, CEO and Chairman of Borland for 12 years.
[edit] Starfish Software (1994-1998)
Starfish Software was founded in 1994 by Philippe Kahn and Sonia Lee. The founding vision of Starfish was "global synchronization and integration of wireless and wireline devices", which translated with the TrueSync platform to: "Enter or edit information anywhere, synchronization is automatic everywhere". Starfish developed much of the core IP for device synchronization, especially in the wireless industry. TrueSync was the first Over-The-Air (OTA) synchronization system. Starfish was successfully acquired by Motorola for $325 million in 1998 and subsequently became a division of Nokia after Motorola's downturn. Today Starfish's technology is an integral part of the Nokia platform[citation needed].
[edit] LightSurf Technologies (1997-2005)
Kahn is credited with the invention in 1997 of the camera phone,[3] which was the founding vision of Lightsurf. The impetus for this invention was the birth of Kahn's child. He was so excited and wanted to show off pictures so he jerry-rigged a cell phone with a digital camera and sent off photos in real time. In a recent NPR interview, Kahn discusses the social impact of the camera phone.[9] In a recent article with Slate.com, Kahn discusses the invention of the camera phone and its uses today.[9] Lightsurf built the first end-to-end solution for picture messaging. Lightsurf technology powers the offerings of Sprint, Verizon and many other leading carriers in the world. Lightsurf is now owned by VeriSign, who acquired the company in 2005 for $315 million as it was filing its IPO. The camera phone is arguably one of the most successful consumer electronic devices of all time with more than 1 billion projected to be sold worldwide in 2008. Work on the camera phone infrastructure started in 1997. In Japan J-phone used the blueprint architecture set forward by Kahn and his team. The first handset was made by Sharp Electronics and the whole system complete with picture-sharing was made public in 1999 with excellent commercial success by 2001. In the North American market, Sprint and Verizon partnered with LightSurf. However Sprint was the first to deploy a commercial system in 2002. The Sprint system, designed, developed and managed by LightSurf, was a combination of ASP/MSP solutions. The first US camera phone was the Sanyo 8100 running on the Sprint infrastructure with the LightSurf Picture-Mail system.
[edit] Fullpower Technologies (2003-Present)
Fullpower is not yet listed, focused on the convergence of life sciences and wireless. The Fullpower website discusses diabetes, heart disease, mobile health, and MEMS technology. According to the website, Fullpower will become a listed company on 15 September 2007.
[edit] Philanthropy
Sonia Lee and Philippe Kahn established the Lee-Kahn Foundation in 1998. the foundation sponsors local and national non-profit organizations dedicated to advancing human growth through increased access to health care, education and the arts as well as animal welfare. It is deeply committed to sustaining a quality environment in which our children will flourish.[10]
[edit] Music
Kahn is a formally trained classical musician having studied classical flute and musicology at the Zurich Conservatory in Switzerland. He considers himself an "enlightened amateur"[citation needed] that takes time every day to practice[citation needed]. Kahn has recorded jazz albums with professionals that are among his friends. He has recorded three albums that mix modern classical influences such as Dutilleux, Jolivet and Debussy with straight ahead jazz. His albums are available on most online music stores. In 1990 he released "Pacific High" featuring: John Abercrombie, Alex Acuna, Richie Beirach, Billy Hart, Ray Kane and Dave Liebman. In 1991 he released a CD called "Walking on the Moon," featuring his own performance and promoting space exploration. Later in 1992 he released "Paradiso" featuring: John Abercrombie, Alex Acuna, Alan Broadbent, Terence Blanchard, Peter Erskine, Dave Eshelman and John Patitucci.
[edit] Sailing and sports
Kahn's focus on the environment and the outdoors lead him to the sport of sailing. Kahn's sailing team, Pegasus Racing, competes in many world championships each year around the world.[11] The team's recent accomplishments include winning the Melges 24 world championships, the Transpac race multiple times, 1st and 3rd place at the 2006 International 14 World Championships, 1st at the Mumm 30 2006 North American Championship, 1st at the 2006 18' International Skiff Regatta in San Francisco, 1st at the 2006 Key West Melges 24 Regatta, 1st at the 2006 St. Francis Perpetual ZTrophy. Kahn's son, Samuel "Shark" Kahn has placed in the top ten at numerous world championships and has been the youngest member of the US National Sailing Team at age 15.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Darrow
- ^ Parks, Maney, Agger, Krey
- ^ a b Kahn
- ^ Computer History Museum
- ^ Unz
- ^ Wortman
- ^ Kellner, Krey, Jeffers, Parks
- ^ Borland press release
- ^ a b Kahn, NPR interview
- ^ www.lee-kahn.com
- ^ www.pegasus.com
[edit] References
- Seitz, Patrick. "His Camera Phone Was A Snap", Investor's Business Daily, 2007-03-06. Retrieved on March 3, 2007.
- Taft, Darryl. "Philippe Kahn: Original Software Gangsta Still on a Mission", eWeek.com, 2007-02-05. Retrieved on February 6, 2007.
- Maney, Kevin. "Baby's arrival inspires birth of cellphone camera — and societal evolution", USA Today, 2007-01-23. Retrieved on December 25, 2007.
- Father of the Camera Phone. publicradio.org. Retrieved on January 7, 2007.
- Agger, Michael. The Camera Phone. slate.com. Retrieved on January 18, 2007.
- The 25 near-greatest PCs of all time (1971-1983). PCWORLD.ca. Retrieved on September 14, 2006.
- Borland (1996-11-07). Kahn Resigns as Borland Director — Cites Increasing Demands of New Business. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-04-21.
- 1973. Timeline. Computer History Museum. Retrieved on April 20, 2007.
- Darrow, Barbara. "1999 Industry Hall of Fame / Borland's Big Man", Computer Reseller News. Retrieved on April 28, 2006.
- Jeffers, Michelle. "Getting Chance To Dance", Forbes. Retrieved on April 21, 2006.
- Kahn, Philippe. Résumé. Retrieved on April 20, 2007.
- Kellner, Tomas. Survivor. Fortune. Retrieved on August 30, 2007.
- Krey, Michael. "Borland Founder Kahn Focuses On Sending Photos Over Cell Phones", Investor's Business Daily. Retrieved on April 21, 2006.
- Parks, Bob (October, 2000). Wired Magazine, The Big Picture - Borland International Inc.'s Philippe Kahn. Retrieved on April 20, 2007.
- Rohrbough, Linda (December 20, 1991). Borland: Kahn's C-mas CD promotes space exploration - Borland International Inc.'s Philippe Kahn. Retrieved on April 17, 2007.
- Unz, Ron K.. "Sinking Our State", Reason. Retrieved on April 21, 2006.
- Wortman, Victor D. (June, 1997). Prominent Silicon Valley Entrepreneur Wants His Company to Be the "Dolby Labs of the Wireless Industry". Retrieved on April 22, 2007.
[edit] External links
- Lee-Kahn Foundation, has biographies of Lee and Kahn
- Fullpower Technologies, has biographies of Lee and Kahn
- Pegasus Racing, follows all of Kahn's sailing activities
- LightSurf Technologies home page
Persondata | |
---|---|
NAME | Kahn, Philippe |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Entrepreneur, camera phone inventor |
DATE OF BIRTH | March 16, 1952 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | France |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | French entrepreneurs | French inventors | French philanthropists | French computer scientists | American entrepreneurs | American inventors | American philanthropists | American computer scientists | Borland | Motorola | French Americans | French Jews | Naturalized citizens of the United States | 1952 births | Living people