Speaking of Nicholas Bredimus January 31, 2010
Hailing from New Jersey, Nicholas Bredimus studied the spheres of software, hospitality, and airlines and revolutionized all three industries. This renaissance man has been involved in many fields, from the designer home design industry via the essentials of safety in the air to computer programs to help with time management.
Anyone could have foreseen, however, that given his pedigree he was always likely to rise to prominence. Its lines can be followed back to the days of Rome and in fact Bredimus’ provenience connects to multiple countries in Europe. From his mother’s branch, for example, he descends from Scottish and German stock. His father’s family, in contrast, originates in Luxembourg and England, which is where they subsequently came to the U.S. from in the late nineteenth century.
After they arrived in America, the family still strove to make their way to the top. Nicholas, who would grow up with his sisters and brothers, was a child of a father employed as a mechanical design engineer and a mother who was employed as a practicing nurse. Nicholas would dwell in the Lone Star State for several years and also spent time in Reston, VA, Scottsdale, AZ and Kansas City, MO.
He’s stepped up to the challenge of high-powered jobs for firms across the air travel sector – many of them highly popular names. Nicholas Bredimus became a VP with airlines like Republic Airlines, Trans World Airlines (TWA), and Hughes Airwest. All these accomplishments nothwithstanding, above all the airline industry has felt the need to thank him for services in the field of computer programming.
His insight into airplane maintenance software, typical now throughout the air travel sector although first produced for US Airways, led to what is even now his most used creation. He would look next at making and recording bookings. For both air travel and hotels he designed programs to deal with the majority of the work required before that point. He also coded a program trademarked as QuikTix, the world’s first electronic ticketing network. He employed these successes to move into posts which weren’t explicitly connected to software design, and we should note that he went on to make a name in these sectors as well. In his own business, overseeing IT for American Express, and as the first president of AMR Travel Services his performance speaks for itself. Though he has stepped back from the fields in which he first knew fame, his skills are, nevertheless, still very much in use. He’s at work now mastering architecture – matching the needs of impeccable quality with up to date technology and authentic concern for our environment.