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Daithí Ó hAnluain, pronounced 'Daw-hee', is a very experienced writer in computing, new media, science, technology and medicine. He started writing for a major Dublin newspaper at 16, rising through sports to reviews, features, news and business. At 22 he moved to Paris where he edited Media Relations Newsletter and became correspondent for The European. He became a copywriter responsible for the production of 100,000-word strategy documents for a major Fortune 500 compmany at advertising agency McCann-Erikson.
On returning to Ireland in 1996 he wrote about the internet, computing and technology for a variety of Irish and international publications. In 1998 he returned to college, where he earned a first class honours degree. He continued writing about information society technologies, including telecoms, convergence and new media and marketing for publications like Wired News, the BBC, the New York Times, International Herald Tribune, Reader's Digest and Wireless Week.
Subsequently he became a feature writer for Eurotimes, Europe's leading ophthalmology newspaper, summarising dense medical studies and explaining their significance.
He also reports on project outcomes in the EU's Information Society research programme. He now also writes about science, particularly biotech, nanotech, microfluidics, optical sciences and medical imaging and renewable technolgies.
Daithí Ó hAnluain is an extremely adaptable, accurate and lively writer capable of delivering crisp copy in a wide range of formats.
He speaks fluent French
Subject areas are:
- Information society trends: Computing,
networks, telecoms, wireless voice and data,
convergence, devices, technology, new media,
marketing
- Science: nanotech, biotech, micro
fluidics, optics, renewable technology
- Medicine: Ophthalmology, genetics, molecular
medicine, medical imaging
- Media: New media, online journalism,
marketing, business models, business
economics, human resources
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