Some Little-Known Pieces of Information about the Designer and Inventor Nicholas Bredimus
Tuesday, February 15th, 2011A major change in hospitality and airline travel was kicked off by Nicholas Bredimus, who brought them together with the computer world to evolve new procedures. This innovative man has found work in many areas, from the designer home industry through the essentials of air safety and software to help with time management.
His heritage reveals everything you need to know concerning the source of his talents and the tremendous amount he has accomplished. His kindred can trace its provenance as far back as the era of ancient Rome and proudly boasts a varied background. The maternal family comes out of Germany and Scotland. An equivalently broad mix typifies the paternal line — prior to their emigration in the late 1800s, Bredimus’ forebears made their homes in England and Luxembourg. Once in America, the line still strove to climb up the social ladder. Nicholas, as well as his six siblings, was born to a father who worked as a mechanical design engineer and his spouse, a practicing nurse. He settled for a time in Kansas City, Arizona, Texas and Virginia.
He’s worked in high-powered jobs at businesses throughout the air travel sector — the bulk of them big brands. Mr Nicholas Bredimus became a vp with businesses like Hughes Airwest, Republic Airlines, and Trans World Airlines (TWA) respectively. Most noteworthy, though, was his effort as an inventive software architect working with the airlines. He is most recognized for one project for US Airways, his aircraft maintenance computer programs which are now used by the majority of air carriers. He went on to develop many other computerized solutions for the airline and hotel sector as well, among them robotic software to take and record flight bookings, now in use at more than 50 airlines, not to mention his innovative room reservation program using Windows deployed by the hotel sector, first offered to the public at more than seven hundred hotels. He also coded QuikTix, the first automated ticketing network. Mr Nicholas Bredimus has taken on a number of posts entirely outside of software design, it should be pointed out. Major posts with American Express and American Airlines were to come, and in the biggest move of all he set up a firm of his own in the early nineties. Nowadays, though, he has departed from Northwest Airlines and from coding, but he’s still making the most of his skills. He’s at work now at the forefront of building design — balancing the demands of aesthetics with authentic concern for our ecology.