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Botcollector: Can you give us a brief description of yourself, ie. your main personality traits, a brief synopsis of how you got where you are today, your vocation, what you do during non-work hours, etc.
Jack: Hey! remembering things wasn't part of the
deal! :>) Okay, I will try and sift thought the rubble for you. Let's see, I was born in Washington, DC way back in the early 60's. Peace man! I bought an Atari PC (yes they really made a
Personal Computer) in the 80's to work on a music project I was doing at the time.
Little did I know it would turn into a fascination with computers themselves.
Soon I was up day and night studying computers and interacting with other people online.
In 1997 I headed West for the land of the dotcom, Silicon Valley (where I live
today). These days I spend my time slinging code for a well known dotcom.
By night I engage in my favorite hobby of collecting Transformers and other toys and supporting Web sites about them.
Botcollector: In a discussion we had, you mentioned a few of the IT jobs you had that involved you with some big Internet Development and ISP-related entities near their beginnings. Can you outline your career a little for us?
Jack: Sure, after I got out of school in 1993 I went to work at the National
Institutes of Health in Maryland as a systems administrator at the National
Library of Medicine. There was all kinds of research going on there; Medline
and the Visible Human projects. They were just beginning and there was a big
push to make them accessible over the Internet. At the time, the only people
who knew how to set up a Website were people who managed the servers.
So I got to work on a lot of early projects that were on the Internet. Sometime in 1995, I got a call from AOL.
They were looking for people who had experience with the Internet.
I worked at America Online till 1997 when I went to work at a new company in San Francisco called CNET.
Since then, I've worked at an array of dotcoms and media companies like Digital City,
Download.com, Broadband Office, NBC, IBM, Snap.com, CBS and the Discovery Channel.
I was building everything from community and ecommerce to search engines and TV show Web
sites. I was learning all the tricks of online publishing trade.
It's been nothing less than a total blast and an amazing learning experience to say the least.
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