User:Eric M Gearhart

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Revision as of 11:07, 29 April 2007 by imported>Eric M Gearhart (Moved "necessity" section)
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Introduction/Background

I'm currently an Active Duty soldier in the United States Army, deployed to Baghdad, Iraq. My "job" in the Army is as an Information Systems Operator/Analyst, which basically translates to "a geek in the Army."

I've always been passionate about and interested in technology in its myriad forms, from computers to Sci-Fi, since around age 12 (the "Age of Reason" as it were).

If you're so inclined, you can read my résumé at nixwizard.net and see pictures of my life in Tucson (and Baghdad unfortunately) at the Gallery here

The necessity of this project

If there is any doubt on the necessity of this project, please see Wikitruth for all the convincing one could possibly need.

Call for Help

Please help out on the Computers Workgroup articles! The four or five of us that regularly edit articles there can't do it alone. You can see related changes in the Workgroup here.

Images on CZ

See Image_talk:MOS_6502.jpg for an interesting dialog between myself and constable Stephen Ewen about importing images from Wikipedia or Wikipedia Commons. Things are definitely not always what they seem to be.

Current Focus on CZ

I'm going to change my focus on CZ for a while, possibly indefinitely. I'm going to focus on "polishing up" articles I work on until they gain approval status, rather than blazing through Citizendium and starting stub after stub that doesn't get "cleaned up" and ready for approval status. I ask that Computers Workgroup editors help me in this endeavor. I hope this change of focus will help Citizendium. We're all working towards a better "free encyclopedia" in the long run, right? :-)

Current Project

I'm currently reading "On the Edge: The Rise and Fall of Commodore," a book describing the history of Commodore International, its people, and its computers. I'd like to start or improve related articles as I read the book, covering the people that worked there (Jack Tramiel, Chuck Peddle), the companies Commodore bought out (MOS Technology), and the technology Commodore developed (such as the Commodore 64 or the MOS 6502 processor).

Articles I'm collaborating on

Articles Approved
I Collaborated On