Welcome. I'm sort of a feral information theorist. My interests have taken me into computer science, cognitive science, economics and entertainment. I've worked for a variety of software companies, R&D think-tanks, media publishing giants, information security outfits and capital management firms.
I've written on a number of topics: technology, media, business&finance, food, work, leisure and contemporary culture, for Salon.com, The Wall Street Journal, The San Jose Mercury and others. I wrote a novel about the Silicon Valley, published by Simon&Schuster. NBC and Imagine Television made it into a TV pilot.
I invented a popular Internet-era collectible novelty: a simultaneous satire on the Dot-com bubble and the Tarot. Then I did another one in response to the Metrosexual fad. Apparently I can't resist social observation, graphics hacks or poking fun at kitsch spiritualism.
I've got some ancient geek cred: I've been a knowledge engineer, Unix systems programmer and network security engineer, often in the flagrantly indiscreet style of the Hacker (with all the ambivalence toward authority that implies). I still enjoy some favor with the alt.2600/Cypherpunk/Slashdot kids and the Unix/Perl community, who still seem to quote me despite my absence from the tech scene for most of a decade.
I don't write much anymore. My work these days is better served by anonymity.
Thanks for visiting. Contact me by clicking the picture at the top of the page.