Liquid Computing Federal appoints government industry experts to Board

Leading fabric computing company elects Tom Kreidler, James Muldoon and Dendy Young to federal Board: Liquid Computing, the developer of LiquidIQ, the industry-leading fabric computing system, today announced the appointment of three distinguished government information technology veterans to the Liquid Computing Federal, Inc. Board of Directors. The Board will provide high-caliber executive leadership and will exercise oversight of federal government business development, strategic management and Liquid Computing, Inc.’s expansion into the federal marketplace. “Each of our new Board members has a proven track record of building and growing successful IT businesses in the Federal marketplace,” said Brian Hurley, co-founder and CEO of Liquid Computing. “Their collective expertise in managing growth inside federally-focused businesses is virtually unparallel in this industry. The broad range of leadership qualifications and deep industry experience that Tom, James and Dendy bring to the table will be highly instrumental in ensuring the success of Liquid Computing.” Liquid Computing Federal, Inc. Board members include:
  • Tom Kreidler, president of Liquid Computing Federal, Inc., is a 35-year computing and telecom veteran known for successfully building federal divisions of both Juniper Networks and Sun Microsystems. Mr. Kreidler has extensive experience with product, service, networking and integration companies in both government and commercial markets. Prior to his position at Sun, Mr. Kreidler served 16 years at Burroughs (now Unisys) and Lockheed Missiles and Space supporting the U.S. federal government.
  • James Muldoon, U.S. Air Force veteran and CEO of METCOR, is a trailblazer with nearly 30 years experience in all phases of the procurement process. Mr. Muldoon currently serves as the chairman of Learning Systems International and the Board of Trustees for St. Mary’s College of Maryland. He has led a prestigious list of clients, including Northrop Grumman, Booz Allen Hamilton Inc. and AT&T, in the acquisition of over $120 billion in federal business. Prior to his industry focus, Mr. Muldoon worked on Capitol Hill, supporting the passage of the 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
  • Dendy Young, Managing Partner of McLean Capital, LLC, and former CEO and chairman of GTSI Corp., is an award-winning industry leader with more than 30 years of information technology and government procurement experience. Mr. Young spent 12 years leading GTSI Corp., and has been recognized with the Federal CIO Council’s Azimuth Award, the FOSE Industry Award and the Federation of Government Information Processing Council President’s Award. Prior to GTSI, he was CEO of Falcon Microsystems, Inc., one of two companies he founded and sold between 1982 and 1994.

Liquid Computing Federal, Inc. is the first company to make it possible to have truly scalable computing at a fraction of the cost of traditional data centers. With LiquidIQ, a revolutionary fabric computing server, Liquid Computing delivers on the reality of a “data center in a box” by integrating computing and communications into one box and enabling the virtualization of all resources. LiquidIQ significantly increases performance and return on investment while displaces a huge portion of the data center, making it incredibly energy efficient. Barriers to systems management are nonexistent because it is operating system, processor and communications agnostic. LiquidIQ is simple to implement, to operate, to scale and to reconfigure, making it ideal for scalable computing users in the government and commercial enterprise markets.