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Joseph DiNucci | |
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Born | Joseph DiNucci |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Carnegie Mellon University in 1964 |
Occupation | Executive Coach |
Spouse(s) | Linda DiNucci, married since 1964 |
Children | 2 |
Joe DiNucci spent 17 years at Digital Equipment Corporation from 1972 to 1989 [1], sold technologies ranging from PDP-8s to RISC-powered systems, managed 500 people, imported MIPS' RISC microprocessor, built the $2B workstation business, and left for MIPS when Digital stock was $175. As MIPS’ VP of Strategy Development, Joe engaged Bill Gates in the deal that got Microsoft to develop Portable OS/2 (better known as Windows NT) developed on the MIPS R4000 chip, and built MIPS’ systems business. When Silicon Graphics acquired MIPS in 1992 SGI’s CEO made Joe an offer to become VP of Automotive and Aerospace Industries. In 1995 Joe became SGI’s VP Marketing, and recruited Bob Lutz who was president of Chrysler, then vice chairman of GM, onto SGI’s board.
In 1997 Joe was recruited to be president of CAD.Lab, an MCAD company based in Bologna Italy. In 1998, as VP Business Development for E.piphany, the first CRM company, he recruited the initial sales force and earliest customers including Autodesk and FedEx. During and after the dot-com bubble, Joe worked in executive positions at several startups and speedups, like Asymetrix, Click2Learn, DTAKT Systems, Sextant Technologies, Sensei Partners LLC, and Immersion Corporation [2]. Joe has served on the boards of two public companies and currently serves as a board member for one VC-funded pre-public firm, Coulomb Technologies Inc [3].
![]() | This article's use of
external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. (July 2010) |
Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control regarding Joseph DiNucci and Silicon Graphics]
![]() | This user page may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. No cleanup reason has been specified. Please help improve this user page if you can; the talk page may contain suggestions. |
![]() | The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's
notability guideline for biographies. (June 2010) |
Joseph DiNucci | |
---|---|
Born | Joseph DiNucci |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Carnegie Mellon University in 1964 |
Occupation | Executive Coach |
Spouse(s) | Linda DiNucci, married since 1964 |
Children | 2 |
Joe DiNucci spent 17 years at Digital Equipment Corporation from 1972 to 1989 [1], sold technologies ranging from PDP-8s to RISC-powered systems, managed 500 people, imported MIPS' RISC microprocessor, built the $2B workstation business, and left for MIPS when Digital stock was $175. As MIPS’ VP of Strategy Development, Joe engaged Bill Gates in the deal that got Microsoft to develop Portable OS/2 (better known as Windows NT) developed on the MIPS R4000 chip, and built MIPS’ systems business. When Silicon Graphics acquired MIPS in 1992 SGI’s CEO made Joe an offer to become VP of Automotive and Aerospace Industries. In 1995 Joe became SGI’s VP Marketing, and recruited Bob Lutz who was president of Chrysler, then vice chairman of GM, onto SGI’s board.
In 1997 Joe was recruited to be president of CAD.Lab, an MCAD company based in Bologna Italy. In 1998, as VP Business Development for E.piphany, the first CRM company, he recruited the initial sales force and earliest customers including Autodesk and FedEx. During and after the dot-com bubble, Joe worked in executive positions at several startups and speedups, like Asymetrix, Click2Learn, DTAKT Systems, Sextant Technologies, Sensei Partners LLC, and Immersion Corporation [2]. Joe has served on the boards of two public companies and currently serves as a board member for one VC-funded pre-public firm, Coulomb Technologies Inc [3].
![]() | This article's use of
external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. (July 2010) |
Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control regarding Joseph DiNucci and Silicon Graphics]