Friday, January 2. 2009
I'm really not sure I understand these "seven things" or "tagged" memes, but
I'm going to give it a shot, after
Keith Casey did a drive-by
tagging of me on New Year's Eve.
So, without further ado, seven things you may not know about me...
-
My actual college degree is in comparative religion. I ended up
in the Religion department at the
University of Puget Sound (yes, the
initials are UPS, which can easily cause confusion with brown,
parcel-bearing trucks), due to a line of questioning that occurred
during an Artificial Intelligence course I was taking. The instructor
was asking if there would be any ethical barrier to unplugging an AI --
i.e., since it would be capable of thought, would this be equivalent to
"killing" it? My initial response was, "No," because humans consist of
more than thought... and then I started wondering a bit about that. My
emphasis in religion was in Eastern religions. I have a minor in
Mathematics (CS at UPS was actually CS/Mathematics).
-
I have an FCC Commercial Radio Operator's License. My parents
were volunteer DJs at KGLT while I
was growing up, and I did my first radio announcing at... get this...
the ripe age of 11. I finally got my license before starting college so
that I could be a DJ at the university station... and ended up as the
General Manager of KUPS
my last two years.
-
I had long hair -- down to my butt at times -- for around ten
years. Which likely comes as a huge shock to those of you who
have met me at conferences. Ironically, I cut it off just prior to
moving to Vermont as part of an effort to increase the success of my job
hunt.
-
Before I started my programming career, I was a graphics
technician. The job immediately prior to my first programming
position was with a small book publisher that specialized in bird
hunting and flyfishing guidebooks, for which I created maps, scanned and
processed images for books, and did book and catalog layout.
-
My first Object Oriented Programming was in Perl. If you've
ever done OOP in Perl, you'll likely agree with the following statement:
OOP in any other language is easy by comparison. I mean, come on, a
syntax where the very definition of an object requires that you "bless"
a "thingy"? Truly; this is from the "bless" documentation:
bless REF: This function tells the thingy referenced by REF that it
is now an object in the CLASSNAME package. If CLASSNAME is omitted,
the current package is used. Because a bless is often the last thing
in a constructor, it returns the reference for convenience. Always
use the two-argument version if a derived class might inherit the
function doing the blessing. See perltoot and perlobj for more about
the blessing (and blessings) of objects.
This made OOP in PHP look easy.
-
I hold the degree of shodan in Aikido, though I haven't trained
in several years, due to time and travel constraints. I love the
movement and flow of Aikido, and always found it very meditative. I also
liked working with weapons, especially the bokken (wooden sword). This
is why when I say, "don't make me get my clue bat out," you should take
heed; I know from experience that white oak leaves a mark.
-
I could have been Cal. When
Zend first interviewed me, it was for
the position of Editor-in-Chief of
DevZone. After my in-house
interview, I had reservations -- I didn't feel experienced or connected
enough, and was worried I'd botch it. Fortunately for me, and probably
the PHP community in general, they decided to hire me as a PHP developer
instead.
So, that's seven things (and quite a bit more, really) about me. And now
it's time to tag some others:
- Cal Evans is an obvious choice for
me. Besides having worked together for some years, he's a great friend.
- Stefan Koopmanschap, who
took a train to Amsterdam just to have dinner and a beer with me.
- Sean Coates, whom I met in an
airport on the way back from ZendCon two years ago, who lives less than two
hours away, and whom I haven't seen since that ZendCon.
- Lorna Jane Mitchell, with whom
I'll be doing a tutorial session on Subversion at php|tek, and who will be
clearly flustered by being tagged.
- Ivo Jansch, whom I met almost two years
ago, and somebody I admire and respect greatly.
- Ligaya Turmelle, one of
my co-authors for "The PHP Anthology," the woman who got me to volunteer as
a phpwomen Booth Babe, and now MySQL guru.
- Rob Allen, who has made my job easier
by publishing tutorials and now a book on Zend Framework, and who in
real-life is a mild-mannered Clark Kent I'd gladly raise a pint with any
day.
And here are the rules I'm supposed to pass on to the above bloggers:
- Link your original tagger(s), and list these rules on your blog.
- Share seven facts about yourself in the post - some random, some wierd.
- Tag seven people at the end of your post by leaving their names and the
links to their blogs.
- Let them know they've been tagged by leaving a comment on their blogs
and/or Twitter.
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It doesn't seem like that long since the last time this happened, but apparently its been two years and the "tell us something new about yourself" meme has come around again. I was trying to ignore it but now I've been tagged by Matthew, Davey and Kathy
Tracked: Jan 04, 14:03