Paul Fremantle, VP of Technology, WSO2
Paul Fremantle co-founded WSO2 after 9 years at IBM, where he was a Senior Technical Staff Member. While at IBM, Paul created the Web Services Gateway, and led the team that developed and shipped it as part of WebSphere Application Server. Paul was a member of the team that put the Service Integration Bus technology into WebSphere Application Server 6. Paul also co-created the Web Services Invocation Framework (WSIF) with Sanjiva Weerawarana, who is chairman and CEO of WSO2. Paul was co-lead of JSR 110: Java APIs for WSDL, which produced WSDL4J.
Paul is currently co-chair of the OASIS Web Services Reliable eXchange Technical Committee, which is charged with creating the industry standard for reliable message exchange over SOAP. Paul was a member of IBM's WebSphere Architecture Board and Messaging Architecture Board.
Paul's involvement in Open Source goes back to the original Apache SOAP project, where Paul donated code to enable access to Enterprise JavaBeans. Paul led the donation of WSIF and WSDL4J to Apache, and led IBM's involvement in the Axis C/C++ project.
Before moving to development, Paul was the key WebSphere technical sales lead for Europe from the launch of WebSphere, working closely with development to manage beta programmes, develop training materials, and enable first-of-a-kind J2EE projects.
Paul also worked in IBM Global Services for 3 years, providing technical and business consultancy around the Internet and e-business. Before joining IBM, Paul was a consultant at ZS Associates, providing analytical sales forecasting consultancy to the Pharmaceutical market.
Paul has published many articles, both on the Web and in traditional forms, and has spoken at numerous industry conferences, including ApacheCon, Colorado Software Summit, XML Europe, Software Architecture, and others. Paul has published two books: Building Web Services in Java, 2nd Edition, and The XML Files: Using XML and XSL with IBM WebSphere V3.0 (IBM Redbook).
In his university days, Paul received an MA in Mathematics and Philosophy and an MSc in Computation, both from Oxford University.