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I live and work in Cambridge, UK. Of course I'm a computer nerd: my excuse is I trained as an engineer (gives me a broader perspective on things) and I'm in it for how I can help people use their computers more effectively. I'm sure if I wasn't into computers myself, I'd be just as happy helping them do something else. You can contact me on either of these addresses:
Cambridge ResidentI've been living in Cambridge for more than 20 years now and I'm feeling pretty much like this is "home".
Computer NerdI own a computer (a Mac, infact). I work with people and their computers (most of which aren't Macs). Most of my friends use computers. This doesn't make me quite the sad person that that implies. I work for an international marketing company, YTKO, as their IT Director. That means I build websites (mainly the techinical and user-interface aspects) and do technical support. We have offices in Cambridge, Norwich, Leeds, Truro, Athens and the South of France. In my previous job I worked for the electronic publisher Chadwyck-Healey (now ProQuest) doing technical support and looking after their web site. While there I also designed several websites for subscription-based services. Prior to that I worked for a friend's startup called Brain Training (and later, Expertease). We were writing computer-based training (CBT) software and I headed up a small development team. Before that was a great 3-and-a-half years working for Prime/Computervision at Harston Mill (just outside Cambridge). They wrote computer-adided design (CAD) software called "MEDUSA" (still available in a remarkably similar incarnation). Initially I worked in their documentation department writing several of the more technical manuals, then I transferred to work as the programmer on their HVAC (ducting) application (part of the MEDUSA Plant Design System, MPDS). And my first job (after graduating from an engineering degree at Lancaster), in 1986, was as the User Liasison Officer in the Computer Centre of the Cambridgeshire College of Arts and Technology (CCAT), now Anglia Ruskin University. CyclistI've been a cyclist in Cambridge ever since I arrived here nearly 20 years ago. For the majority of that time I've lived within what I would consider easy cycle-commuting distance of my employers. For example, I'm about 15 minutes ride from my current employer. Amazingly, I'm only on my second bike - the first finally broke irrepairably after 21 years! That's all the more surprising, since it was actually stolen three times:
I'm only really interested in cycling as a means to an end. For me that "end" is any, or all, of:
Last modified: September 15, 2009 |