Holiday Greetings to Everyone!
By Ben Okopnik and Kat Tanaka Okopnik
A Note from the Editor
Dear readers:
This month, we at the Linux Gazette are taking a break. Frankly, we're
short of articles - and since it's the holiday season, your editor didn't
feel like fighting the tide. LG has been running non-stop since 1997 -
that's quite a record for an all-volunteer publication!
Wishing you and yours all the joys of the new year, whatever your calendar of preference, and looking forward to maybe seeing some of you at SCaLE 6. (Ben and Kat are tentatively planning a westward excursion to Michael's first ex utero Linux conference!)
Talkback: Discuss this article with The Answer Gang
Ben Okopnik
Ben is the Editor-in-Chief for Linux Gazette and a member of The Answer Gang.
Ben was born in Moscow, Russia in 1962. He became interested in electricity at the tender age of six, promptly demonstrated it by sticking a fork into a socket and starting a fire, and has been falling down technological mineshafts ever since. He has been working with computers since the Elder Days, when they had to be built by soldering parts onto printed circuit boards and programs had to fit into 4k of memory. He would gladly pay good money to any psychologist who can cure him of the recurrent nightmares.
His subsequent experiences include creating software in nearly a dozen languages, network and database maintenance during the approach of a hurricane, and writing articles for publications ranging from sailing magazines to technological journals. After a seven-year Atlantic/Caribbean cruise under sail and passages up and down the East coast of the US, he is currently anchored in St. Augustine, Florida. He works as a technical instructor for Sun Microsystems and a private Open Source consultant/Web developer. His current set of hobbies includes flying, yoga, martial arts, motorcycles, writing, and Roman history; his Palm Pilot is crammed full of alarms, many of which contain exclamation points.
He has been working with Linux since 1997, and credits it with his complete loss of interest in waging nuclear warfare on parts of the Pacific Northwest.
Kat Tanaka Okopnik
Kat likes to tell people she's one of the youngest people to have learned to program using punchcards on a mainframe (back in '83); but the truth is that since then, despite many hours in front of various computer screens, she's a computer user rather than a computer programmer.
When away from the keyboard, her hands have been found full of knitting needles, various pens, henna, red-hot welding tools, upholsterer's shears, and a pneumatic scaler.