Dr. Walter Hehl
Walter Hehl, Ph.D.
holds a Diploma in Physics and a Ph.D. in Natural Sciences, both from
the
University of Stuttgart in Germany.
He is a consultant and speaker on the future of IT and innovation.
He retired as content manager of the “Industry
Solutions Lab Zürich” in 2007.
This Industry Solutions Lab is the European executive briefing center of
the Research Division of IBM and a global meeting place of executives
and politicians with IBM researchers and consultants.
Walter started his career as physicist and development engineer
at
IBM’s development laboratory in Böblingen (Germany). As a
professional, he
developed advanced printing technologies (e.g., electro erosion
and ink jet printing), and specialized in digital image processing for
printing and display of images. As a manager, he was for many years
responsible for advanced developments and innovation for systems and
software in the Böblingen laboratory.
After a
sabbatical year as
professor for software technology at the Technical University of
Dresden, he became the content manager for IBM’s European Industry
Solutions Lab, first in Stuttgart (Germany), then directly in IBM
Research Lab Zurich. In this function, he was responsible for the
technologies and solutions used to represent actual trends in IBM
Research and in the industry. This includes the strategic direction of
the technology exhibition at the center. His special interests are the
trends in technologies — from nanoscience to software technology
—
and
the management of innovation in large enterprises and in the society.
He is the author of many scientific papers and also popular articles on
Information Technology. He holds IBM’s 3rd plateau for patent
disclosures. In his function as event manager at the Zurich Research Lab
(Industry Solutions Lab), he hosted and ran workshops on the future
of IT and on innovation with several hundred companies and organizations
from all over the world.
Walter authored
Trends in der Informationstechnologie.
His patents include
Actuator mechanism for a print hammer or the like,
Non reactive positioning device,
Horn loaded piezoelectric matrix printer drive method and apparatus,
and
Cost-based method for dynamically pricing and prioritizing an
e-mail.
Read his
blog and his LinkedIn profile.
Visit his
Facebook page.