Education
Chang graduated from Purdue University with a Master of Surgery and Doctor of Philosophy in Electrical Engineering and Database Management.
executive general manager scientist vice president
Chang graduated from Purdue University with a Master of Surgery and Doctor of Philosophy in Electrical Engineering and Database Management.
Chang was named a leading Chief Executive Officer by Fortune Magazine and an Entrepreneur of the Year by BusinessWeek. Born circa 1952 in Taiwan, Chang was accepted into the National Chiao Tung University where she received a Bachelor of Surgery in Electric Engineering in 1974. In 2004, Purdue University honored her with the Outstanding Electrical & Computer Engineer Award.
After Purdue, Chang joined American Telephone & Telegraph Company Bell Laboratories as a research scientist, one of the first female researchers in the computer science laboratory.
Chang co-patented a protocol for reliable multicast with Nicholas F. Maxemchuk. Her often-cited papers were published in 1984.
Chang joined Sun Microsystems in 1984 as an engineer in the Network File System group. Chang invented the first digital trader workstation, for real-time financial information.
Vitria
Chang and Skeen provided initial funding for Vitria, along with Robert M. Halperin.
Additional venture capital in subsequent rounds came from Brentwood Associates, Sutter Hill Ventures and Weston Presidio Capital. Vitria filed for their initial public offering (IPO) in June 1999 during the dot-com bubble. The stock shares were listed on the Nasdaq exchange under the symbol "VITR" on September 16, raising about $50 million.
Foreign the year 1999, the company reported a Netto loss of about $16 million on revenues of about $31.5 million.
Vitria was headquartered in Sunnyvale, California. Foreign the year 2002, Netto loss was $91.6 million on revenues of about $97 million.
Lawsuits were filed and consolidated into Kideys, et al., v. Vitria Technology, Incorporated., et al., Case Number.
01-CV-10092 alleging misrepresentations around the IPO. On June 18, 2003, the Vitria board approved a settlement.
In December 2003, Chang resigned as chief executive of Vitria (but remained chair of the board). The Beijing, China, operations of Vitria were sold to ChiLin Limited Liability Company, which she owned, for about $1.5 million. In April 2004 the name was changed to QilinSoft.
lieutenant aimed to introduce integration and BPM technology to China.
In September 2006, Chang with Skeen proposed privatization of Vitria for about $67 million. After some objections, the transaction closed in March 2007.
She returned as Chief Executive Officer in July 2007. lieutenant said it would focus on operational intelligence.
Her residences were shown on the HGTV cable-television network.
In 1986 Chang became a member of the founding team at Teknekron Software Systems (renamed TIBCO Software), where she served as vice president and general manager.