Bruce Lincoln
Bruce Lincoln is a Senior Fellow at the Columbia Institute for Tele-Information and an Adjunct Professor at the Columbia Graduate School of Business. From May 2008 until June 2011, Bruce was Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Center for Technology, Innovation and Community Engagement (CTICE), Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science. Currently, Bruce is the Founder/CEO of Bruce Lincoln Consulting, a technology advisory practice.
Bruce Lincoln has been involved in cutting edge technology product development and technology commercialization since the late 80’s, when as the first Ford Fellow in Educational Technology, he was one of the early CD ROM content developers for the Apple Macintosh computer. In 1995, after successfully developing the first commercial website for the America’s Cup and producing the first project to put the high speed Internet and the World Wide Web in New York’s public schools, Bruce founded the Urban Cyberspace Company based upon his vision of a ubiquitous Internet. Bruce incorporated Urban Cyberspace in 1998 to commercialize the intellectual properties, business processes, procedural methodologies and the hardware and software design prototypes developed over the course of a ten-year cycle of advanced technology diffusion projects: The Harlem Renaissance 2001 (HR2K1) Project; the New York Online Neighborhood Educational Network (NY ONE-Net); and the New York City Community Technology Center Bank (NYC CTC Bank).
Bruce is honored to be a member of the Advisory Council for the Keller Center for Entrepreneurship Education at Princeton’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.