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Alan eustace board of drone companies orlando

          Positions: Since , president and CEO of World View.

        1. At Paragon, he and Poynter led the.
        2. Education: University of Central Florida · Location: San Francisco Bay Area · + connections on LinkedIn.
        3. October 24, Alan Eustace, a senior vice president at Google, parachuted from a balloon near the top of the stratosphere.
        4. Alan was the winner of the Laureus Award for Action Sports, the FAI/Breitling Milestone Award, and the Northern California Aero.
        5. Education: University of Central Florida · Location: San Francisco Bay Area · + connections on LinkedIn..

          Alan Eustace

          American computer scientist

          Robert Alan Eustace (born 1957) is an American computer scientist who served as senior vice president of engineering and first senior vice president for knowledge at Google until retiring in 2015.[3] On October 24, 2014, he made a free-fall jump from the stratosphere, breaking Felix Baumgartner's world record.

          The jump was from 135,890 feet (41.42 km) and lasted 15 minutes, an altitude record that stands as of 2025[update].[2][4] He won the Laureus WorldAction Sportsperson of the Year in 2015.[5]

          Early years

          The son of a Martin Marietta engineer, Eustace grew up in Pine Hills, Florida, then a working-class suburb of Orlando, where small ranch houses had been built for employees of the Martin Marietta Corporation.[6] After graduating from Maynard Evans High School in 1974, he received a debate scholarship from Valencia College and attended it for a year before transferr