Contributors
The following people contributed their hacks, writing, and
inspiration to this book:
Tim Allwine is
a Senior Software Engineer at O'Reilly &
Associates. He develops software for the Market Research group,
various spidering tools that collect data from disparate sites, and
is involved in the development of web services at
O'Reilly.
AvaQuest
(http://www.avaquest.com/) is a
Massachusetts-based IT services firm that specializes in applying
advanced information retrieval, categorization, and text mining
technologies to solve real-world problems. GooglePeople and
GoogleMovies, created by AvaQuest consultants Nathan Treloar, Sally
Kleinfeldt, and Peter Richards, came out of a web mining consulting
project the team worked on in the summer of 2002, shortly after the
Google Web API was announced.
Paul Bausch
(http://www.onfocus.com/) is a
freelance web developer and author living in Oregon. He was a
co-creator of the weblog software, Blogger, and recently co-wrote a
book about weblogs called We Blog: Publishing Online with
Weblogs. He believes (like Google) that
"love" (75,700,000) will conquer
"hate" (7,900,000).
Erik Benson
(http://www.erikbenson.com/).
CapeScience.com (http://www.capescience.com/) is the
development community for Cape Clear Software, a web services
company. In addition to providing support for Cape
Clear's products,
CapeScience
makes all sorts of fun web services stuff, including live services,
clients to other services, utilities, and other geekware.
Antoni Chan
(http://www.alltooflat.com/) is
one of the founders of All Too Flat, a bastion of quirky content,
pranks, and geeky humor. The Google Mirror is a 2,500 line CGI script
that was developed over the period of a year starting in October
2001. When not working on his web site, he enjoys playing music,
bowling, and running after a frisbee.
Tanya Harvey Ciampi (http://www.multilingual.ch) grew up in
Buckinghamshire, England, and went on to study in Zurich, where she
obtained her diploma in translation. She now lives in Ticino, the
Italian-speaking region of Switzerland, where she works as an English
technical translator (from Italian, German, and French) and
proofreader, and teaches translation and Internet search techniques
based on her WWW Search Interfaces for Translators. In her free time,
she enjoys fishing with her father on the west coast of Ireland,
writing poems, and playing celtic music.
Peter Drayton
(http://www.razorsoft.net/weblog/)is a program
manager in the CLR team at Microsoft. Before joining Microsoft, he
was an independent consultant, trainer for DevelopMentor, and author
of C# Essentials and C# in a
Nutshell (O'Reilly).
Andrew Flegg
(http://www.bleb.org/) works for
IBM in the UK having graduated from the University of Warwick a few
years ago. He's currently the webmaster of Hursley
Lab's intranet site. Most of his work (and fun) at
the moment is taken up with Perl, Java, HTML, and CSS. Andrew is
particularly keen on clean, reusable code, which always ends up
saving time in the long run. He's written several
open source projects, as well as a couple of commercial applications
for RISC OS (as used in the Iyonix PC: the first desktop computer
using an Intel XScale). In his non-computer time, Andrew is trying to
organize a wedding having just got engaged!
Andrew Goodman (http://www.page-zero.com) is cofounder and
editor of Traffick.com, an acclaimed guide to search engines and
portals. Traffick foresaw trends such as the rise of pay-per-click
search engines well before they were adopted by the mainstream.
Goodman has published articles in publications such as
Internet Markets, The Globe and
Mail, and Yorkshire Post Magazine. He
is often cited in various business and technology publications, and
he often speaks at conferences such as Search Engine Strategies.
Kevin Hemenway (http://www.disobey.com/), better known as
Morbus Iff, is
the creator of disobey.com, which bills itself as
"content for the discontented."
Publisher, developer, and writer of more home cooking than you could
ever imagine (like the popular open sourced syndicated reader
AmphetaDesk, the best-kept gaming secret Gamegrene.com, the popular
Ghost Sites and Nonsense Network, the giggle-inducing articles at the
O'Reilly Network, a few pieces at
Apple's Internet Developer site, etc.),
he's an ardent supporter of cloning merely so he can
get more work done. He cooks with a Fry Pan of Intellect +2 and lives
in Concord, NH.
Mark Horrell
(http://www.markhorrell.com/) has
worked in search engine optimization since 1996 when he joined Net
Resources International, a publisher of industrial engineering web
sites, where he conceived and developed the
company's Internet marketing strategy. He left in
2002 and is now a freelance web developer based in London, UK,
specializing in search engine-friendly design.
Judy Hourihan
(http://judy.hourihan.com/).
Steven Johnson (http://www.stevenberlinjohnson.com/) is the
author of two books, Emergence and
Interface Culture. He co-created the sites FEED
and Plastic.com, and now blogs regularly at www.stevenberlinjohnson.com. He writes the
monthly "Emerging Technology"
column for Discover Magazine, and his work has
appeared in many publications, including The New York
Times, Harper's,
Wired, and The New Yorker. He lives in
Brooklyn, New York.
Stuart Langridge (http://www.kryogenix.org/) gets paid to hack
on the Web during the day, and does it for free at nights when
he's not arguing about Buffy or Debian GNU/Linux.
He's keen on web standards, Python, and strange
things you can do with JavaScript, all of which can be seen at his
web site and weblog. He's also slightly surprised
that the Google Art Creator, which was an amusing little hack done in
a day, is the most popular thing he's ever written
and got him into a book.
Beau Lebens
(http://www.dentedreality.com.au)
is a consulting information architect and PHP developer, who is
heavily interested in movements such as an increase in online
strategy and planning, the REST philosophy, and open source
development. Beau has a self-taught background in web technologies
and currently works in a clicks 'n'
mortar company based out of Perth, Western Australia, and runs his
own consultancy at the same time. He firmly believes in making
complex systems easy to use and simple to understand, and makes this
a primary objective in all of his projects. More information about
Beau and what he's up to is available on his web
site, the home of his consulting company, Dented Reality, as well as
a number of musings and observations on the web industry and
technology in general.
Mark Pilgrim
(http://diveintomark.org/) is the
author of Dive Into Python, a free Python book
for experienced programmers, and Dive Into
Accessibility, a free book on web accessibility
techniques. He works for MassLight, a Washington DC-based training
and web development company, where, unsurprisingly, he does training
and web development. But he lives outside Raleigh, North Carolina,
because it's warmer.
Chris Sells
(http://www.sellsbrothers.com/)
is an independent consultant, speaker, and author specializing in
distributed applications in .NET and COM. He's
written several books and is currently working on Windows
Forms for C# and VB.NET Programmers and
Mastering Visual Studio .NET. In his free time,
Chris hosts various conferences, directs the Genghis source-available
project, plays with Rotor, and in general, makes a pest of himself at
Microsoft design reviews.
Alex Shapiro
(http://www.touchgraph.com/) is
the founder and CTO of TouchGraph LLC. Alex's
experience with TouchGraph is paralleled by that of the dotcom
survivors described in Newsweek's March 25, 2002
"Welcome Back to Silicon Valley"
cover story. When faced with a shrinking technology market, he too
decided to take the opportunity to innovate rather then struggling to
find generic employment. On January 15, 2001, Alex quit his first job
at Sapient, NYC, ahead of the first round of layoffs. Luckily, he was
able to find work as an independent consult designing software for a
brand valuation firm. His free time was spent polishing off the graph
visualization code at the heart of TouchGraph. In May 2002, Alex
passed the brand valuation client to a friend and started working on
TouchGraph full time. Since then, things have been very exciting due
to the growing popularity and public acclaim for the software.
TouchGraph has yet to get first-round funding.
Kevin Shay
(http://www.staggernation.com/)
is a writer and web programmer who lives in Brooklyn, New York. His
Google API scripts, Movable Type plug-ins, and other work can be
found at the soon-to-launch staggernation.com.
Gary Stock
(http://www.googlewhack.com/stock.htm) coined
the term "Google whack" while he
had intended to be doing research for UnBlinking (http://www.unblinking.com/). When Gary writes
for UnBlinking, he might better be focused on his role as CTO of the
news clipping and briefing service Nexcerpt (http://www.nexcerpt.com/). Gary works at
Nexcerpt to get a break from stewardship of unusual flora and fauna
on 160 acres of woods and wetland he owns, which in turn, keeps him
from spending time with his wife (and Nexcerpt CEO) Julie, whom he
married to offset his former all-consuming career as an
above-top-secret computer spy, which he first had entered to avoid
permanently becoming a jazz arranger and pianist. Seriously.
Brett Tabke
(http://www.webmasterworld.com)
is the owner/operator of WebmasterWorld.com, the leading news and
discussion site for web developers and search engine marketers. Tabke
has been involved in computing since the late 70s and is one of the
Internet's foremost authorities on search engine
optimization.
Matt Webb
(http://interconnected.org/home/)
is a systems engineer at UpMyStreet.com, specializing in developing
UK Government and Public Sector local information sites. Outside of
work, he's developed several IM bots (including
Googlematic), Dirk (a vast collaborative net of associations), and
runs and writes for Upsideclown.com, which publishes short fiction
and creative writing and has spawned a book. He is best known for
Interconnected, a weblog on society and technology. He lives in
London.
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