Both seminars will be held in the Knight Conference room in E19-623!

April 10
Reporting about the Net in the Past and in the Future
John Markoff, New York Times.

Please note: this seminar begins at 4:45pm.

John Markoff joined The New York Times in March 1988 as a reporter for the 
business section.  He now writes for the science section from San Francisco.  
Prior to joining the Times, he worked for The San Francisco Examiner from 1985 
to 1988.

Markoff has written about technology and science since 1977.  He covered 
technology and the defense industry for The Pacific News Service in San 
Francisco from 1977 to 1981; he was a reporter at Infoworld from 1981 to 1983; 
he was the West Coast editor for Byte Magazine from 1984 to 1985 and wrote a 
column on personal computers for The San Jose Mercury from 1983 to 1985. He has 
also been a lecturer at the University of California at Berkeley School of 
Journalism and an adjunct faculty member of the Stanford University Journalism 
Department.

The Times nominated him for a Pulitzer Prize in 1995, 1998 and 2000. The San 
Francisco Examiner nominated him for a Pulitzer in 1987. In 2005, with a group 
of Times reporters, he received the Loeb Award for business journalism. In 2007 
he shared the Society of American Business Editors and Writers Breaking News 
award. In 2007 he became a member of the International Media Council at the 
World Economic Forum. Also in 2007, he was named a fellow of the Society of 
Professional Journalists, the organization’s highest honor.In June of 2010 the 
New York Times presented him with the Nathaniel Nash Award, which is given 
annually for foreign and business reporting.

Markoff is the co-author of  “The High Cost of High Tech,” published in 1985 by 
Harper & Row.  More recently he wrote “Cyberpunk: Outlaws and Hackers on the 
Computer Frontier” with Katie Hafner, which was published in 1991 by Simon & 
Schuster.  In January of 1996 Hyperion published "Takedown: The Pursuit and 
Capture of America's Most Wanted Computer Outlaw," which he co-authored with 
Tsutomu Shimomura.  “What the Dormouse Said: How the Sixties Counterculture 
shaped the Personal Computer Industry,” was published in 2005 by Viking Books.
 

April 12
Conversation with Janet Silver, Literary Director, Zachary Shuster Harmsworth.

Please note: this seminar begins at 4:30pm.

Janet Silver brings more than three decades of experience as an editor and 
publishing executive to her work as a literary agent.  She was previously Vice 
President and Publisher at Houghton Mifflin Company, where she published works 
by Richard Dawkins, Jonah Lehrer, Natalie Angier, and Jerome Groopman, among 
others, and edited novelists Philip Roth, Tim O’Brien, and Jonathan Safran 
Foer.  As an agent, Janet represents writers in a wide range of both nonfiction 
and fiction. Among her  clients are former Knight Fellow Craig Simons, whose 
book The Devouring Dragon: How China Is Destroying Our Natural World is 
forthcoming,  and Ada Brunstein, a Science Writing Program graduate whose 
articles on technology have appeared in The Atlantic.   Other clients include 
Humaira Shahid, a leading Pakistani journalist and legislator; Brian Christian, 
author of The Most Human Human: What Artificial Intelligence Teaches Us about 
Being Alive, a Wall Street Journal  bestseller; and Cheryl Strayed, whose new 
memoir Wild is a New York Times  bestseller. 



 
_______________________________________________
Sci-tech-public mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/sci-tech-public

Reply via email to