Praxis: Difference between revisions
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= 1974 - 2023 = | = 1974 - 2023 = | ||
<center><b> The 3 resume pdfs are on the page linked by the social equation at the top left.</b></center> | <center><b> The 3 resume pdfs are on the page linked by the social equation at the top left.</b></center> | ||
This is called a précis because it is, an impressionistic one at that, there were software dev deeds at IBM and elsewhere detailed in the tail of the Auteur resume whose front matter is focused on my current and vastly enriched work life, free of extraneous constraints and the excuses that go with them. | |||
Blaming Sandy and NotTheMama for not being engineers or scientists for a less than propitious start, plus a generous helping of mea culpas, my work life in this Gregorian epoch was less than it might have been. Persisting far longer than most landed me however with an unusual depth and breadth of experience as a [[Mensa|<span style="color: cyan;">life long learner</span>]] to the new epoch. Things were learned. So while I don't have the CV of a [[:en:Doug Lenat|<span style="color: cyan;">Doug Lenat</span>]] or [[:en:Jaime Carbonell|<span style="color: cyan;">Jaime Carbonell</span>]], I'm still here, enjoying florit, and looking forward to a lot more of it. Going cold turkey on wage labor is harder than it looks. The first work I remember was at age 8 when NotTheMama told me to go the local supermarket and offer to help ladies carry their groceries, which I did do and being a cute kid, successfully, the ancestor of the PWYWG, which is a fix for that jones. | Blaming Sandy and NotTheMama for not being engineers or scientists for a less than propitious start, plus a generous helping of mea culpas, my work life in this Gregorian epoch was less than it might have been. Persisting far longer than most landed me however with an unusual depth and breadth of experience as a [[Mensa|<span style="color: cyan;">life long learner</span>]] to the new epoch. Things were learned. So while I don't have the CV of a [[:en:Doug Lenat|<span style="color: cyan;">Doug Lenat</span>]] or [[:en:Jaime Carbonell|<span style="color: cyan;">Jaime Carbonell</span>]], I'm still here, enjoying florit, and looking forward to a lot more of it. Going cold turkey on wage labor is harder than it looks. The first work I remember was at age 8 when NotTheMama told me to go the local supermarket and offer to help ladies carry their groceries, which I did do and being a cute kid, successfully, the ancestor of the PWYWG, which is a fix for that jones. | ||
1974 is the actual start because that's when I took training at the schools Control Data was running and actually did first programming, but I went back for a 4 year degree majoring in Math and CS and only had Operator jobs before 1980. I did have a DP course at a community college before CDC in '73 which pushes it back to my teens. The Control Data Institute I went to btw, was in the building shown on the Bob Newhart Show at that time on Michigan Avenue as being where he had his office. Like many I just left college and went to The Valley to start my first professional job but I did graduate as I had enough hours, a A- average and was paid up so De Paul granted me an Arts degree instead of the Science one for the Math program I was supposed to be in. In an ideal path Ida started earlier and finished a Masters but it really wouldn have made a difference in my ability to read relevant literature or deal with industry, since in Math and CS there's nothing to stop you from doing that on your own. | |||
As an aside to § d, <i>Mainframe Heritage</i> of the 2 page brochure, the Burroughs systems programmer job at Daytona Beach Community College '83-85, was a transition in two senses, it was the first time I was actually carrying a real development responsibility and the first time I would have control of the computer other than the personal ones I had at that time which were considered toys still. The shift after that to work on PC based systems, first with Methods/Digitalk Smalltalk at EER then contracts at IBM Boca, mostly OS/2 related, completed that transition to a mature doer. It's kind of amazing to think the first couple of years in those days you might not actually have a coding responsibility which is unthinkable now but in the last of the mainframe days not so much. DBCC ran on a 6800 but a few months in the Burroughs FE found a 6700 on a state of FL scrap heap and it was brought in and used by the ~10 person programming staff as a development machine which I controlled from my office. So that was how I became hands on. I did modify COLLEGEMCS, put PRINTERMCS into service for the app staff, and made a trivial MCS to operate a very troublesome OCR test forms reader. In a MCP shop of those days the systems programmer would compile the OS and components on upgrades and manage system level deployments. | |||
From the late nineties I mostly worked remote, but did work on-site in Buffalo in '14/15, and from the late 80s most jobs were on a contractor basis, Givaudan being the longest employee role, from the turn of the century largely independent of 3rd parties. I would say the GMRV job conclusively ended this stage of work life. The last paid gig as of this writing was Sep '23 and I'm calling it the 1<sup>st</sup> PWYWG as it was 3 days at my thrift rate. It had a mutually happy outcome, the kind I've generally been able to limit myself to for some time. Pauca sed bona. I am an Ayn Rand communist which you can find out more about from the 工 王 link. | From the late nineties I mostly worked remote, but did work on-site in Buffalo in '14/15, and from the late 80s most jobs were on a contractor basis, Givaudan being the longest employee role, from the turn of the century largely independent of 3rd parties. I would say the GMRV job conclusively ended this stage of work life. The last paid gig as of this writing was Sep '23 and I'm calling it the 1<sup>st</sup> PWYWG as it was 3 days at my thrift rate. It had a mutually happy outcome, the kind I've generally been able to limit myself to for some time. Pauca sed bona. I am an Ayn Rand communist which you can find out more about from the 工 王 link. | ||
There were a few work experiences that could, in a stretch, like much of the current situation (RCAI), and of yore of compilers, be considered AI. First some systems of the Air Force Satellite Control System network such as dynamic programming and other techniques used for attitude manoeuver, stationkeeping and other ops planning would arguably be considered such, although I had no hands on, I did have source access. The "metadatabase" of the EER job where I was introduced to Smalltalk had ambitions in that area. The central hourly labor scheduling algorithm of CSIs EMPS product which I improved qualifies. Finally, the Givaudan client server engine, now on my github, probably the most consequential work in my non-free work life, by virtue of its adaptive handling of SQL and the subsequent change from Givaudan being a unit of Roche in a duopoly with International Flavors and Fragrances to a standalone corp with market dominance. Could also start recounting compiler related things but not doin that. | |||
There is a thing that was "AI" before RCAI (Rentier Capitalism AI) but it is fairly mooted by RCAI which is what I am referring to when I use this [[AI|<span style="color:lime;">term of art</span>]] or <html><a href=https://devops1.sameboat.network/About%20DCP><span style="color"lime;">current fulfillment</span></a></html> on it. I've written on this elsewhere but the skinny is that I never mean RCAI wrt what I'm doing here and so I avoid the term, cf. also <i>Sovereign Praxis</i>. In principle, and largely to the extent that the CPC is not a front for thinly fronted Chinese Capitalism there is a wider social context in which one can operate and ofc, RCAI itself primes the field for one to stand out. Other than the domain '''ai-integration''' with legacy suffix .biz, I am avoiding the term here to avoid association with RCAI. | |||
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