My day job is designing and developing
computer systems.
I built my first computer when I was
eight years old: it had one transistor. I've worked with analog and
digital, with dozens of programming languages, on machines from
microcontrollers to mainframes and large server clusters. My work has
gone into aircraft, factories, machines, tools, peripherals, consumer
electronics, instrumentation, telephones, radios, and automobiles. I've
helped make chips, and the machines that make the chips. It's fun, but
the best part is seeing people use and enjoy the products, even when they
don't know what's inside.
Most of my background has been software,
but I sometimes have crossed the line to hardware and the physical world.
It's hard to write code for embedded systems without knowing a little
about control theory and the physics and math used to solve the problems.
But the software world is amazing, too. The most interesting problems are
the most complex ones, especially those involving multiple computers
working together.
My other interests include mathematics,
philosophy, economics, law, and history. I'm also a student of languages,
an interest which started when I was young and collected stamps: I wanted
to read all those things written in strange scripts on those little
pieces of paper from all around the world.
Nancy E and I live in the mountains of
central Nevada, where the population density is about one person per
square mile. There are one bank and two grocery stores within about
seventy miles of here; for more, for other banks or a supermarket, we
must drive at least a hundred miles. This land was a mining claim,
patented in 1869 but it hasn't been worked for over a century. It's on
a dirt road with no official name. The Pony Express once went by here;
some horse people re-create the event once a year, and we can sit at
our front gate and watch the rider pass. Our electricity comes
from solar cells, and our connections to the Internet are by satellite.
This is considered high desert by some, we don't get much precipitation,
but we have trees. We're 6500 feet above sea level. Our nearest
neighbours, not counting the critters who were here before humans, live
two miles away at a U.S. Forest Service compound.
We have pinyon, juniper, rocks, sage,
and quietness for our horses, dogs, cats, and ourselves. We see and hear
coyotes, deer, birds, mountain lions, civet cats, foxes, and occasionally
a badger. A few cattle graze in the surrounding area, and sometimes elk
and wild horses in the valleys below. There are also, of course, the
smaller creatures, such as mice and insects. Entertainment includes
sitting on a fallen tree or boulder and enjoying the sound of the
cicadas, or listening to the snow fall, or maybe just enjoying the
breeze.
I hope you enjoy the site. The menu at
the left is the best way to navigate around it. If you're new to
this site, you might start here.