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Welcome
I'm Myles Bogner, and thanks for
visiting my spot on the web. You can email me at myles
"at" bognerfamily.com.
Professional
Biography
Dr. Myles Bogner has extensive
experience leading teams in designing and realizing "smart"
software. Myles has been hooked on all aspects of the industry
since being introduced to computing in the early 1980s. Entering
the IT industry in 1990, Myles has focused on:
integration of
large disparate systems
supply chain
management
sales
architectures
including enterprise SOA infrastructures and governance,
military tactical systems, and peer-to-peer systems
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He
has led the development and deployment of large API-based
middleware installations on several occasions. Myles has been on
the leading edge in creating novel solutions for a wide range of
organizations, including venture-backed clients, medium and large
sized corporations, and government agencies. He has significant
experience meeting with Members of Congress, military General
Officers, and corporate executives.
Myles is an excellent leader in IT
management and a vibrant instructor who enjoys giving talks. He
has a refereed publications record. He has been a key team member
of several interdisciplinary teams. Myles received his Ph.D. and
M.S. from The
University
of Memphis in just three
years with a focus on cognitive
software. Myles received
his Bachelor of Science from Rhodes,
majoring in computer science and minoring in business
administration. At Rhodes, he was the recipient of the Seidman
Award for top four year student athlete, the Russel Award for top
senior computer science and mathematics student, and two-time
academic all-American.
Myles has been Asynchrony
Solutions' Vice
President of Research & Development since 2000 and continues
to lead many of the company's most significant programs and
initiatives.

Free
Family Tree
Free
Family Tree is software
I've written from scratch that allows, from a simple template,
large family trees to be generated and easily be placed on web
sites or printed. It is free for personal use, and I simply ask
that you share back with me any contributions made to the source
code.
Presentations
I
make presentations quite frequently; however, they seem to all be
behind the corporate NDA. I've included my public ones below.
Bogner, Myles. (2002). Instant
Messaging Planet: panel participant for “Developing IM
Applications.”
Bogner, Myles. (2001). Open
Source Software: Ready For Prime Time? Given
at St. Louis ITEC conference and St.
Louis Linux Users Group.
Bogner, Myles. (2000). Building
An Agent In Java.
Richmond,
VA Exploring Group.
Bogner, Myles. (2000). “Conscious”
Software Agents: Melding Science and Software.
University
of Maryland Baltimore County,
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Graduate Seminar.
Bogner, Myles, Hacker, Doug,
Yetman, Holly, and Klettke, Bianca. (1998). A
curriculum script on the topic of computer literacy.
Society
for Text and Discourse.
These documents, "The
Curriculum Script"
and "Processing
Question-Answer Pairs In Tutor,"
were precursors to this presentation.
Bogner, Myles. (1996). Miiilesss:
The Versatile Race Scorer.
Rhodes
College public
presentation. For my senior seminar project, I created Miiilesss:
The Versatile Race Scorer which scores collegiate cross-country
meets. It was one of the first scoring programs to directly
handle bar codes off of race numbers worn on runners' jerseys. It
was written for the Mac utilizing Think C 5.0 with the coding
done on my ancient Mac LC II. Here are the Public
Talk Examples as well
as the Miiilesss
User's
Manual.
Academic
Publications
Below are my publications from my
time in academia.
Bogner, Myles, Maletic, Jonathan,
and Franklin, Stan. (2000). ConAg:
a reusable framework for developing “conscious”
software agents. This
paper was accepted for journal publication but we never heard
back from the journal after our revisions were complete.
McCauley, Lee, Franklin, Stan, and
Bogner, Myles. An
emotion-based “conscious” software agent
architecture.
Proceedings of the International Workshop on Affect in
Interactions Towards a New Generation of Interfaces, Siena,
Italy, October 21-22, 1999. New York: Springer-Verlag.
Bogner, Myles. (1999). Realizing
“consciousness” in software agents.
Memphis: Doctoral dissertation, The University of Memphis. Ann
Arbor, MI: UMI Dissertation Services. When published, this was a
top download on Agent
Web.
Bogner, Myles, Ramamurthy, Uma,
and Franklin, Stan. (1999). “Consciousness”
and conceptual learning in a socially situated agent.
Dautenhahn, Kerstin. (Ed.). Human cognition and social agent
technology. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
Ramamurthy, Uma, Bogner, Myles,
and Franklin, Stan. (1998). “Conscious”
learning in an adaptive software agent.
Proceedings of The Second Asia Pacific Conference on Simulated
Evolution and Learning (SEAL98). Canberra, Australia.
Bogner, Myles. (1997). “Texas”.
Stevens, Cynthia A. (Ed.). The Other Side of Midnight. Owings
Mills, MD: Watermark Press, 195.
Scripts
People
Dr.
Stan Franklin was my
Master's and Ph.D. adviser. He is the founder and leader of
"Conscious" Software research. He has the most widely
accepted definition of autonomous agent. Stan has been a lead
researcher in topolgy and neural networks.
Dr.
Pam Hanson is a leading
biologist trying to overcome how cancer becomes resistant to
anti-cancer agents.
Dr.
Jonathan Maletic is a
leader in software reuse. He was on my Master's and Ph.D.
committees.
Dr.
Lee McCauley is a
leader in emotion research, specifically emotions in software.
His research pushes the question of, "Can software really
feel?"
Dr.
Felix Vazquez-Chona is
a leading optics researcher currently at The University of
TN-Memphis. Felix has done it all, and I'm honored to be his best
man.
Dr.
Peter Hastings is
prolific publisher in cognitive architectures, educational
software, and natural language processing.
Other
Links
Earth
Worthy Causes
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