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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Megan_SmithMegan Smith - Wikipedia

    Megan J. Smith (born October 21, 1964) is an American engineer and technologist. She was the third Chief Technology Officer of the United States (U.S. CTO) and Assistant to the President, serving under President Barack Obama.

  2. Nov 4, 2014 · Former Google X executive Megan Smith started this month as the U.S. chief technology officer. She's only the third person to have the job.

  3. The White House has announced Megan Smith, VP of Google's secretive research lab Google X, will become the new Chief Technology Officer of the United States last night. The 49-year-old will...

  4. Sep 5, 2014 · The White House has announced Megan Smith, VP of Google's secretive research lab Google X, will become the new Chief Technology Officer of the United States last night. The 49-year-old will...

  5. In September 2014, President Obama named Megan Smith the United States Chief Technology Officer (CTO) in the Office of Science and Technology Policy. In this role, she serves as an Assistant to the President.

  6. Former Google VP and Obama’s U.S. CTO Megan Smith believes that greater diversity will make engineering teams stronger — and that data can solve some of our toughest problems.

  7. Megan Smith received her bachelors and masters degrees in mechanical engineering from MIT in 1986 and 1988, respectively. This year, she was appointed to the position of chief technology officer (CTO) of the United States of America.

  8. Apr 9, 2016 · US CTO Megan Smith highlights heritage of women in tech. The former Googler and current chief technology officer of the United States also talks about encryption and bringing more techies to ...

  9. Smith is an advisor to the MIT Media Lab, Vital Voices, Thinkof-Us, LA Olympics 2028, the Malala Fund, which she co-founded. She was selected as a World Economic Forum Technology Pioneer.

  10. Oct 31, 2014 · The chief technology officer of the United States and former Google executive talks with Susan Dominus about why more techies should consider Washington — in spite of the BlackBerrys.

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