The Internet was new to USD then, and the majority of the computer work done was not Internet work, but scientific work by faculty and their students. Ive seen Academic Computings focus move more and more towards providing Internet access to the USD community, and have, I hope, helped push us even further towards that. I took over writing chores at the Academic Computing department, because no one else was doing it, and we desperately needed some simple books explaining--for non-computer users--how to use the Internet. Also I was bored shitless doing backups.
The boss, Dr. Jack Pope, had been teaching a Hands On Beginners Internet course for CERFNet (CERF), and I was tapped to help. This led, in turn, to teaching Internet orientation at USD itself, and various Internet courses at computer conventions from CECC in San Diego to Mecklers Internet World in San Francisco. I also co-authored Computers, Telecommunications, and Western Culture for the International Networking 1995 conference in Birmingham, England. Bart Thurber and I presented the paper amidst a fanfare of Shakespeare and homebrew. Or will have, by the time you read this.
I now write most of the Internet manuals here at USD, for Unix (Huh?) and the Internet, and Ive taken the responsibility of putting this information on-line on the World Wide Web (Dont bother...) so that students can get to it from any computer on campus and beyond. Because it needs to be done and no one else is doing it.
Outside of the USD community Im a big comic book fan, and Im pushing the Internet as a collaborative community in the comic book industry. I maintain two mailing lists: the Gutters (Get your mind out of it...) mailing list, for artists who draw comic books, and Closure, for comic book professionals. I maintain an infobahn service station where comic book artists can come to collaborate, and where comic book fans can get information about their favorite comic books. (Where is it?) As driving force behind the FireBlade Publications on-line bookstore, I hope to help bring the Internet a little bit closer to being an alternative supply for casual reading, and for publishing itself. Id have published this book on the net, but you dont have a computer. (Hm...)
At USD, Im trying to push individual electronic publishing, in which faculty, staff, and students can run their own ftp, gopher, and web sites from their desktop computers. Ive written a Macintosh program that allows net-attached Macintoshes to run mailing lists and serve up ftp by electronic mail. Do you know what that means? Read my book. Or eat my dust.
I run finger, whois, ftp, gopher, smtp, and web server software from the Macintosh on my desktop, specializing in Prohibition, Comic Books, and Role-Playing games. (?) Confused? Read the book, homey.
Guns, drugs, and rock n roll. Rebels and revolution live on the infobahn!
Jerry Stratton
jerry@hoboes.com
Finger/Reply for PGP Public Key
Bad laws do more harm than good dope.