User:Deejoe

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I like the space so much that I want to make sure people, especially new members anxious to try out their codes and keys, can [[get there]]
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== Member reports ==
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=== April 5, 2011 ==
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shardy, of site 3 and hacklab.to, wanted to make sure we knew that http://makerfairetoronto.ca was happening May 7th and 8th.  Five hackerspaces are already on board. If we want to take part, we're welcome.  shardy has a contact in Syracuse but hasn't been able to get in touch with the Buffalo group yet.
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My earliest geek memory is from elementary school.  Our school building was divided into two wings--the "primary wing" consisting of K through 3rd or so, and the "secondary" wing, consisting of 4th through 6th, plus the library and music classrooms.  At some point, I was asked by some adult (teacher, administrator, visiting researcher?) to go down to the secondary wing.  There, this . . . thing . . . was revealed behind a curtain in an alcove right off the hallway.  Only in hindsight have a recognized it as maybe a Teletype machine with green bar paper and acoustic coupler.  I think we were asked questions and our responses were typed in by the operator.  I have no idea what it was all about, I just remember seeing this hulking big machine behind the curtain, like when Dorothy discovers who the Wizard is, and bringing home some of the greenbar.
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== Misc ==
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Anyway, that memory is a bit like the Vikings having "discovered" Greenland--sure, it probably happened, but it's not like they made a big impression by establishing a sustained and continuous presence.
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I like the space so much that I want to make sure people, especially new members anxious to try out their codes and keys, can [[get there]]
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For that, it would have to be in middle school, seeing a TRS-80 in a Radio Shack and playing around with it, and then seeing a Macintosh in a Computerland down the street.  Wasn't long after that that I was checking out books from the public library to teach myself BASIC and writing programs (FOR loops, really) with pencil and paper.
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We had a couple of game consoles before I got my first "real" computer.  My dad had a Magnavox Odyssey system back in the day--it was a Pong-style game, with the game field being a translucent sheet of plastic actually <b>taped</b> onto the TV!  We also got a Simon, and later an Atari 2600.  But probably the electronic game that had the biggest influence on me was my very own [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merlin_(game) Merlin] handheld. 
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The TI-994/A was a transition device for us--I thought of it a bit more like a game console that happened to have a keyboard.  Things really took off for me though when I decided to buy a used ZX-81 from a newspaper ad.  It had been a ZX-80 kit that someone had upgraded to a ZX-81.  We tried to buy a memory expansion module for it, but none of that worked, as it happened.  So, my dad took pity on me and bought a new Timex-Sinclair 1000.  I spent a lot of time with that thing, deciding at one point that what I really needed to do was write my own assembler for it (never finished).  I still have the Rodnay Zaks "Programming the Z-80" (Sybex) from those days--at least I learned binary and hex from the whole exercise, and a hatred for membrane keyboards.
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Hi.  It's too bad the term "fiddler" means what it does, because I "fiddle" with things more than deeply hack them. 
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But whatever.
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Here is an outdated list of skills from an old CV:
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Computer skills include Perl, Unix shell, HTML and some C coding; Windows 95/98/2000/XP, MacOS, webserver, fileserver and general Linux/Unix system administration skills (Apache, Samba/Windows Networking, ssh/SSL, rsync, netatalk, Linux, IRIX, SunOS). Major GNU/Linux experience with Debian, Ubuntu, RedHat, Mandrake and Slackware. Minor NetBSD experience.
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Laboratory skills include organic and inorganic synthesis; solid-phase peptide synthesis and purification; multinuclear multidimensional FT-NMR spectroscopy; FT-IR and Raman spectroscopies; UV-visible, fluorescent emission, and fluorescent excitation spectroscopies; pulsed and CW-ESR spectroscopy; X-ray diffraction structural methods; HPLC; GC-MS.
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You can see the form for the first web application I ever wrote courtesy the Wayback Machine:
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http://web.archive.org/web/19980127144559/elmo.ucsc.edu/MWform.html
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Sort of buried in there, and stuff I found sort of cool to do, were work with cryogens, from pumped liquid Helium on up, and work in vaccum and inert atmosphere environments.  (Vacuum and low-temperature cryogenics go hand-in-hand--hard to maintain low temperatures without vacuum insulation, and if one does get within the ballpark, so long as one has a good seal and not too much helium floating around the insulative spaces, cryopumping happens in any case).
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I've shot film, and developed B&W film and done B&W enlarger work. 
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I cook a little bit, and enjoy making at least a few foods that involve fermentation.
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I drive a vehicle powered by a Diesel motor. 
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I am not a ham, but don't hold it against me.
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This is how one version of this "who are you?" discussion went back in October, 2009 on IRC (edited slightly, as indicated by square brackets):
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* <@deejoe> I'm a glorified sysadmin currently.
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* <@deejoe> I like to read about programming languages.
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* <@deejoe> I've got a strong intellectual freedom streak.
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* <@deejoe> a la EFF, freedom to hack, freedom to read.
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* <@deejoe> freedom to tear your own stuff apart to see how it works
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* <@deejoe> which I did as a kid.
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* <@deejoe> worked on cars a bit with my dad.
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* <@deejoe> then got a graduate degree [that took a lot of hands-on lab work]
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With the exception of content on this my Interlock Rochester wiki user page, I license my Interlock Rochester wiki contributions under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike license version 3.0 ([http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ CC-BY-SA-3.0]).
With the exception of content on this my Interlock Rochester wiki user page, I license my Interlock Rochester wiki contributions under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike license version 3.0 ([http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ CC-BY-SA-3.0]).

Revision as of 22:29, 5 April 2011

Member reports

= April 5, 2011

shardy, of site 3 and hacklab.to, wanted to make sure we knew that http://makerfairetoronto.ca was happening May 7th and 8th. Five hackerspaces are already on board. If we want to take part, we're welcome. shardy has a contact in Syracuse but hasn't been able to get in touch with the Buffalo group yet.

Misc

I like the space so much that I want to make sure people, especially new members anxious to try out their codes and keys, can get there

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With the exception of content on this my Interlock Rochester wiki user page, I license my Interlock Rochester wiki contributions under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike license version 3.0 (CC-BY-SA-3.0).

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