In the mid-1990s he was Head of Software Development for Art of Memory[9] where he produced the Story of Glass multimedia kiosk and CD-ROM amongst others.
Silicon Valley
In 1996, Quine joined Apple Computer where he initially worked as the lead software engineer on the Apple Media Tool. He was also the manager of the Hypercard engineering team and the QuickTime applications team. He worked closely with Steve Jobs on the QuickTime Player application[10] and was co-inventor of two software patents with Jobs.[11] In August 2011, Quine was interviewed by the BBC to discuss Steve Jobs' resignation as CEO of Apple.[12]
After leaving Apple in 2000, Quine worked at a number of technology startups. He was the Chief Scientist of guru.com where he developed the SmartMatch intelligent search engine.[13] After guru.com was acquired by Unicru, Quine stayed on as Chief Scientist and Chief Architect until 2005.[14]
In 2005, Quine co-founded Blurb.com.[14][15] As Chief Technology Officer of Blurb[16] he led the development and launch of their first BookSmart product.[17]
In February 2008, in an interview with the Technology Review, Quine discussed Google's "alternate views" search interface experiments and described Google's vision for the future of search: "One thing to remember is that (search is) still the early days. People think that search is a solved problem. I think we're still in the early days of making search work on a universal global scale. We know we can do better."[23]
In May 2014, Quine was interviewed by Silicon Real and talked about his experience at Songkick, as well as his earlier career and the future of the tech industry.[30] In May 2014, Songkick had more than 10 million monthly unique users and generated more than $100m of ticket revenue through referrals.[31] In June 2015, Songkick announced its merger with direct ticket vendor CrowdSurge and a $16.6m Series C investment round;[32] Quine remains the CTO of the combined company.
In September 2015, Quine chaired a roundtable discussion with a panel of experts in Artificial Intelligence who talked about the risks and opportunities in the field.[33]
Tech City
In March 2012, Quine was named one of the "jobs ambassadors" for Channel 4 News.[34] He regularly comments on startups in Tech City, including writing for The Guardian,[35] talking at conferences,[36] and promoting UK startups for the London Olympics.[37] He is one of the founding members of the Tech London Advocates group.[38] In December 2013, Quine was interviewed on BBC World News by Linda Yueh discussing entrepreneurship.[39]
Leeds University
Quine is a Visiting Professor of Computer Science at the University of Leeds.[40] He lectures at the university on entrepreneurship and startups.[41] He also writes on Computer Science.[42][43] He is one of the prominent engineering alumni of the University.[44]
Return to Silicon Valley
In July 2016, Quine returned to Silicon Valley, where he joined education startup AltSchool.[2] In 2019, he joined Lever as VP of Engineering, Product and Design.[45] In 2022, Quine was working at Mode Analytics.[46]
^Beale, Russell; Finlay, Janet (1992). "DB_Habits: comparing minimal knowledge and knowledge-based approaches to pattern recognition in the domain of user-computer interactions". Neural networks and pattern recognition in human-computer interaction. Ellis Horwood. ISBN0-13-626995-8.
^Crow, D.; Smith, B. (1993). "The role of built-in knowledge in adaptive interface systems". Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Intelligent user interfaces - IUI '93. p. 97. doi:10.1145/169891.169919. ISBN0897915569. S2CID14526323.
^Crow, D.; Desanto, J. (2004). "A hybrid approach to concept extraction and recognition-based matching in the domain of human resources". 16th IEEE International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence. p. 535. doi:10.1109/ICTAI.2004.12. ISBN0-7695-2236-X. S2CID13378806.