Bruce F. Webster
Bruce F.
Webster is an internationally recognized expert on information
technology (IT). He has been an invited speaker at international IT
conferences in Russia, Japan, Central America, and the Middle East. At
the invitation of the US government, he has given private IT-related
briefings to representatives of other nations.
He has given presentations at private conferences of the World Bank, the
US intelligence community, and U.S. Congressional staff. He has
testified about information technology issues three separate times
before Congress and has provided analysis and documents to Senate and
House committees. Likewise, he has been an invited speaker and
participant at public and private conferences at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies.
Bruce has spoken at numerous US-based conferences, including: Mealey’s
IT Systems Failure Conference (originator and co-chair); ABA Section on
Litigation Winter Leadership Conference; Mealey’s Internet Law
Conference; the Blue Cross/Blue Shield Millennium Solutions Conference;
the National Association of Securities Dealers Conference; the
University of Chicago Graduate School of Business Annual Management
Conference; the MBA National Technology in Mortgage Banking Conference;
and several of the Software Development and ObjectWorld Conferences.
He has been an invited guest on “The News Hour with Jim
Lehrer” (PBS), “The Edge with Paula Zahn” (Fox News), “Newsbreak”,
“Morning Blend”, and “@ Issue” (MSNBC), and other TV shows and
productions. He has appeared in news reports for NBC, CNBC, and ABC,
among others, as well as a panelist in a three-hour C-SPAN broadcast. He
has been cited in Newsweek, Barron’s, The Wall Street Journal, National
Journal, American Banker, and a wide range of radio, magazine,
newspaper, and newswire stories.
Bruce personally has been involved in developing, delivering,
analyzing, and advising on information technology for over 30 years in a
broad range of fields: e-commerce, finance, communications, commercial
software, manufacturing, aerospace, and law. He has done consulting with
or at a variety of companies during the past fifteen years, including
Fannie Mae, Sprint, Capital One, USF&G, Northrop Grumman, ARINC,
Motorola, MCI, Apple Computer, Borland, NeXT, and Sun. He also taught
computer science for two years (1985–1987) at Brigham Young University.
Bruce also spent more than a decade in the commercial software market,
helping to start up two different software companies and to raise over
$7M in venture funding for one of them. He has contributed to over a
dozen commercial software products on half a dozen platforms, acting as
chief architect twice. He has served as chief technical officer for two
different companies.
Since 1980, he has written and published over 150 articles on
computer industry analysis, product evaluation, and software
development. Since 1989, he has authored four popular and well-received
books on information technology issues while contributing to two others.
In 2000, he authored the PricewaterhouseCoopers’ white paper
Patterns in IT Litigation: Systems Failure (1976–2000) (PDF,
214KB).
He subsequently wrote two articles based on that research, one for
Mealey’s Cyber Tech Litigation Report and the other for the ABA Computer
& Internet Litigation Journal. Whe wrote for two years as an IT
management columnist (Surviving
Complexity) for the online version of
Baseline.
Bruce is Principal and Founder at Bruce F. Webster & Associates
LLC. He provides expert analysis in matters involving information
technology, with a focus on system development, project failure,
intellectual property, web and internet technologies, and software
engineering. He has worked with several large corporations, providing
advice on enterprise systems architecture, software technology,
development methodology, and intellectual property practices. He has
also consulted in several dozen legal cases, both in the United States
and Japan.
Bruce has acted as both an arbitrator and as a
neutral
expert in IT-related litigation; he has also qualified and testified as
an IT expert in federal and state court, as well as in arbitration. He
is a graduate of Brigham Young University (BSCS, 1978) and did graduate
work in computer science at the University of Houston/Clear Lake City.
He and his wife Sandra live outside Denver, Colorado.
Read his
LinkedIn profile and his
Wikipedia profile.
Read his blog.