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Eckart
Wintzen
Eckhart
Wintzen is,
by his own description, "a businessman who looks like a
hippie." He is passionate about the environment, and wants to
"put technology at the service of inter-human warmth."
What Eckart Wintzen really is: the only 6-foot-tall elf in
existence. He has all the identifying characteristics: long silver
hair; mischievous cherub face; a slightly wacky twinkle in the eyes;
an infectious laugh; the ability to grant wishes, etc.
Eckart was born in a fishing village in Holland, and almost popped
out while his mother was strolling on the beach. He restrained
himself, however, and went on to study math and physics at Leiden
University, work for 10 years for multinationals like Philips
Computer Industrie and European Space Research, then established the
information systems branch of the Dutch daughter company of American
General Telephone in 1973. He bought the struggling company for 10
guilders in 1976 and renamed it BSO (Bureau voor Systeem
Ontwikkeling or "Bureau for Systems Development").
Fast
forward: Eckart resigned in 1996 when BSO/Origin, with 10,000
employees and offices in 75 cities in 25 countries, merged with
Philips, the place where he had started. He then began Ex'tent,
a management and investment company that participates in a wide
range of socially and/or environmentally responsible enterprises.
Along the way, Eckart was instrumental in the success of Ben +
Jerry's Benelux and San Francisco's Wired Magazine (although
creating digital ice-cream remains an elusive dream).
In January of 1997, a chance meeting at a conference bumped Eckart
into Gary Platt, they did the Vulcan Mind Meld and Expression was
born. The rest, you might say, is history, but the history of
Expression has really just begun.
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