Difference between revisions of "John Hicks"

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In a prior career I did dabble in hardware a bit, building an early interface between an 8-bit PC and a typesetting machine. (I was editing a weekly newspaper, the "microcomputer" had just come out, but desktop publishing had not been invented yet.)
 
In a prior career I did dabble in hardware a bit, building an early interface between an 8-bit PC and a typesetting machine. (I was editing a weekly newspaper, the "microcomputer" had just come out, but desktop publishing had not been invented yet.)
  
One DIY project I'm currently involved in is helping to run [http://wxbh.org/ WXBH-LP], an FCC-licensed low-power FM radio station in Fern Creek. I've developed a Linux based system for automating the programming and streaming it to the transmitter and the rest of the world (using cron, bash, PHP, mpd, icecast, etc.) We need volunteers ... both DJs/producers and techies.  
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One DIY project I'm currently involved in is [http://wxbh.org/ WXBH-LP], an FCC-licensed low-power FM radio station in Fern Creek. I've developed a Linux based system for automating the programming and streaming it to the transmitter and the rest of the world (using cron, bash, PHP, mpd, icecast, etc.) We need volunteers ... both DJs/producers and techies.  
  
 
I'm a big fan of Linux and open source software. I helped form [http://kyoss.org/ KYOSS], the Kentucky Open Source Society. If you're into open source (or want to be) I invite you to sign up for our mailing list and come to our next monthly meeting.
 
I'm a big fan of Linux and open source software. I helped form [http://kyoss.org/ KYOSS], the Kentucky Open Source Society. If you're into open source (or want to be) I invite you to sign up for our mailing list and come to our next monthly meeting.
  
Philosophically and politically, I strongly support the DIY (Do-It-Yourself) philosophy implicitly embodied in LVL1. In my mind the DIY movement combines the virtues of self-reliance and voluntary cooperation, and these qualities are critical if we are to have a humane future on this planet. (I probably take this way too seriously. Buy me a beer sometime and let me tell you about it. :)
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Philosophically and politically, I strongly support the DIY (Do-It-Yourself) philosophy implicitly embodied in LVL1. In my mind the DIY movement combines the virtues of self-reliance and voluntary cooperation, and these qualities are critical if we are to have a humane future on this planet. (I probably take this <i>way</i> too seriously. Buy me a beer sometime and let me tell you about it. :)
  
 
My interests include education, music, writing, the Internet, politics (liberty, localism, post-commercialism, real food, etc.), photography, nature, travel, history, anthropology and social psychology, etc. Oh, and bicycling.
 
My interests include education, music, writing, the Internet, politics (liberty, localism, post-commercialism, real food, etc.), photography, nature, travel, history, anthropology and social psychology, etc. Oh, and bicycling.

Revision as of 06:04, 14 August 2010

I've been working as a software developer much of my life, now specializing in web applications (primarily using the LAMP platform: Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP). I'm looking forward to being able to get into hardware design with LVL1 to complete the circle.

In a prior career I did dabble in hardware a bit, building an early interface between an 8-bit PC and a typesetting machine. (I was editing a weekly newspaper, the "microcomputer" had just come out, but desktop publishing had not been invented yet.)

One DIY project I'm currently involved in is WXBH-LP, an FCC-licensed low-power FM radio station in Fern Creek. I've developed a Linux based system for automating the programming and streaming it to the transmitter and the rest of the world (using cron, bash, PHP, mpd, icecast, etc.) We need volunteers ... both DJs/producers and techies.

I'm a big fan of Linux and open source software. I helped form KYOSS, the Kentucky Open Source Society. If you're into open source (or want to be) I invite you to sign up for our mailing list and come to our next monthly meeting.

Philosophically and politically, I strongly support the DIY (Do-It-Yourself) philosophy implicitly embodied in LVL1. In my mind the DIY movement combines the virtues of self-reliance and voluntary cooperation, and these qualities are critical if we are to have a humane future on this planet. (I probably take this way too seriously. Buy me a beer sometime and let me tell you about it. :)

My interests include education, music, writing, the Internet, politics (liberty, localism, post-commercialism, real food, etc.), photography, nature, travel, history, anthropology and social psychology, etc. Oh, and bicycling.