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| subject: | Re: What do you do in real life? |
On Jan 5, 10:16=A0am, Gregory Weston wrote: > In article , > =A0Boot Zero wrote: > > > All, > > > Anyone who is lurking in this forum has been immersed in technology for > > at least the last twenty years. =A0Many have gone on to jobs in technol= ogy. We got our Apple //e when I was nearly 7 years old. I spent a lot of time in my childhood typing in listings from Nibble and became rather proficient with basic. The only modem I had, until much later in the mid 90's, was a Hayes Smartmodem 1200 -- and I frequently BBS'd quite a bit on local Houston lines as well as AppleLink/AOL (under the handle Someone2) -- and remember having a few fun conversations with Burger B[ill|ecky] about the avatar before it was abandoned. I finally got brave enough to try my hand at 6502 asm when I was 15 and wrote a rather nice tilegame interface reminiscent of Ultima, well the UI and tile editor anyway. Later in high-school my dad got a 486sx and I switched over to the world of dos and win 3.1 (yuck!). I spent some time learning Pascal and more of my time was spend writing amiga- style "Mods" under the same handle I still use periodically. For a period of time I was affiliated with a Houston-based demo group named "C.L.A.N." which changed names to "Nebula" -- which ran the popular "trax in space" website. I studied Computer Science at the University of Texas at Austin and learned a lot of the theory behind stuff I vaguely already understood from reading Nibble. And thanks to my experience with 6502, I aced the 68000 asm class (which was notorious for being a fail-out class). After graduating, I knew C/C++, Perl, and some Java. I got a job as an associate consultant in June 2000 with Vignette, and am still presently working there as an Architect after 4 promotions. I mainly push strings of text in and out of databases and through websites (content management), as well as decipher non-deterministic process requirements into finite state automata (workflow). I've worked with several Fortune-500 companies over the past 9 years and survived god knows how many layoff rounds. I owe my ability to write tidy, neat code while economizing resources to that little apple, and my ability to package my code with decent documentation to Nibble. --- SBBSecho 2.12-Win32* Origin: Derby City Gateway (1:2320/0) SEEN-BY: 10/1 3 34/999 120/228 123/500 140/1 222/2 226/0 236/150 249/303 SEEN-BY: 250/306 261/20 38 100 1404 1406 1410 1418 266/1413 280/1027 320/119 SEEN-BY: 393/11 396/45 633/260 267 712/848 800/432 801/161 189 2222/700 SEEN-BY: 2320/100 105 200 2905/0 @PATH: 2320/0 100 261/38 633/260 267 |
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