Mark D. Pesce | |
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Mark Pesce at LCA2011 in Brisbane, Australia
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Born |
Everett, Massachusetts, United States |
December 8, 1962
Nationality | American Australian |
Occupation | author, researcher, engineer, futurist and teacher |
Known for | co-inventor of VRML |
Mark D. Pesce (born 1962) (/ˈpɛʃiː/ PESH-ee) is an American-Australian author, researcher, engineer, futurist and teacher.
Pesce was born in Everett, Massachusetts in 1962. In September 1980, Pesce attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) for a Bachelor of Science degree, but left in June 1982 to pursue opportunities in the newly emerging high-tech industry. He worked as an engineer for the next few years, developing prototype firmware and software for SecurID cards.
In 1988, Pesce joined Shiva Corporation, which pioneered and popularized dial-up networking. Pesce's role in the company was to develop user interfaces, and his research extended into virtual reality.
In 1991, Pesce founded the Ono-Sendai Corporation, named after a fictitious company in the William Gibson novel Neuromancer. Ono-Sendai was a first-generation virtual reality startup, chartered to create inexpensive, home-based networked VR systems. The company developed a key technology, which earned Pesce his first patent for a "Sourceless Orientation Sensor" that tracks the motion of persons in virtual environments. Sega Corporation of America would use the technology on the design of the Sega VR, a consumer head-mounted display (HMD).