Nightingale Intelligent Systems Inc. announced the following changes to its board of directors. Mr. Denis Hébert has resigned as Non-Executive Chairman of the board, effective 13 December 2023. Mr. Hébert joined the board in 2017.

The company announced that Mr. Alan Braverman, a Non-Executive Director since 2022 has been appointed as Non-Executive Chairman by the board to succeed Mr. Hébert. Mr. Braverman and Mr. Hébert will work together to ensure a smooth transition of the role. The Company also announced that Mr. John Hsu, a founder of the Company and currently Nightingale's CTO, will join the board at the same time as an Executive Director, in addition to his ongoing role as CTO.

Mr. Braverman is an entrepreneur and computer programmer most-recently serving as CEO and co-founder of Textline. Prior to Textline, Mr. Braverman was a co-founder of several internet software companies, including genealogy social network Geni and its spin-off enterprise social network, Yammer. Earlier, he co-founded Mollyguard Corporation and Eventbrite.

Earlier in his career, Mr. Braverman programmed web software at Silicon Graphics, eGroups, and Yahoo!. Alan received his B.S. in Computer Science from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Mr. Hsu co-founded Nightingale with Jack Wu and is currently the Company's Chief Technology Officer.

Mr. Hsu has over 15 years' experience in the Robotics industry having founded and currently acting as the Chief Scientist for the Open Source Robotics Foundation in Mountain View, California, United States. Mr. Hsu oversees the technical direction and development for Nightingale. Mr. Hsu previously worked at SpaceX where he wrote the high-fidelity dynamics simulator for predicting flight feasibility and safety and Willows Garage where Mr. Hsu was responsible for defining the vision for the autonomous car and ASV project working on computer vision, numerical algorithm development, path planning, system dynamics analysis and communications, as well as developing personal robot PR2 simulator, which was later used for the DARPA Robotics Challenge simulation competition.

John received his Ph.D. in Aeronautics and Astronautics from Stanford University in the U.S. in 2004. His doctoral dissertation work includes novel numerical algorithm development for solving complex unsteady transonic flows and coupled aerodynamics.