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Alexis Rossi Project Director Alexis has been working with Internet content since 1996 when she discovered that being picky about words in books was good training for being picky about data on computers. She spent several years managing news content at ClariNet (the first online news aggregator), and then became the Editorial Director at Alexa Internet in 2000. After taking a couple of years off to travel and make jewelry, Alexis returned to the online world when she joined the Internet Archive in 2006. Alexis's current personal project is a wiki about beading and wireworking. |
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Andy Wright Executive Assistant-Development Coordinator Andy Wright was born and bred on the sandy shores of Southern California. She attended Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio where she earned a BA in Media Studies, learned to hate snow, and developed a love for non profit work. She cut her teeth as a traveling intern, acting as support for farflung non profits throughout the country and has also worked as a freelance journalist and office drone. She loves unicorns, bacon, making stuffed animals and media democracy. |
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Bill Moyer Software Engineer Bill Moyer has been developing distributed technologies for five years, and commercial and open source software for ten years. Prior to working in the Data Repository and the Collections departments of the Internet Archive, Bill worked at The Sausalito Group and at Flying Crocodile, developing distributed demographic database and data analysis software for corporate intelligence applications. Prior to Flying Crocodile, Bill developed and maintained the GNU C Compiler and related applications in Cygnus Solutions' GNUPro toolchain (acquired by RedHat in Jan 2000) from 1996 to 1999. Prior to Cygnus, Bill developed embedded communications software for First Pacific Networks. |
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Brad Tofel Data Archivist Brad Tofel has been working with Internet technologies for eight years. Prior to the Internet Archive, Brad worked at Alexa Internet, participating in the architectural design for several initiatives, including the Wayback Machine. While at Alexa Internet, Brad managed the storage of the Web collections, performed data mining and indexing of the web collections, and was the Lead Developer for the Toolbar group. Prior to Alexa Internet, Brad built a variety of web applications at Ephibian, a Tucson-based organization that outsourced software engineering and Network Operations Center services for military, research and Internet organizations. Brad received a B.S. in computer science at the University of Arizona in 1996. |
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Brewster Kahle Digital Librarian, Director and Co-Founder Brewster has built technologies, companies, and institutions to advance the goal of universal access to all knowledge. He currently oversees the non-profit Internet Archive as founder and Digital Librarian, which is now one of the largest digital archives in the world. As a digital archivist, Brewster has been active in technology, business, and law. Keywords: MIT'82, helped start Thinking Machines, founder WAIS Wide Area Information Servers, Internet strategist AOL, co-founded Alexa Internet, sold to Amazon.com, directs Internet Archive.
Details:
Brewster has also worked to revise law and policy in light technical advances. He is a board member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and a plaintiff in Kahle v. Gonzales (formerly Kahle v. Ashcroft), which challenges recent copyright term extensions. Brewster is profiled in Digerati: Encounters with the Cyber Elite (HardWired, 1996). He was selected as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2005, the AlwaysOn/Technorati Open Media 100 in 2005, the Upside 100 in 1997, the Micro Times 100 in 1996 and 1997, and the Computer Week 100 in 1995. APPOINTMENTS:
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Bruce Baumgart Research Engineer Baumgart is a hardware tinker, software hacker, and geezer geek who now serves the Internet Archive as a petabox cluster technical support engineer, computer scientist, and open source evangelist. He spent the 1980s as an entrepreneur -- founded, ran and sold Softix, Inc. which built computer ticket systems around the world, including BASS San Francisco and Ticketek Australia. His formal education included a Harvard 1968 B.A. in applied mathematics and a Stanford 1974 Ph.D. in computer science for work done at the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Lab. His informal education includes work at institutions such as Xerox PARC, Foonly Inc., Yaskawa Robotics, and IBM Research at Almaden. The top two computer science questions he is pursuing for this year, 2005, concern characterizing disk data decay and tabulating lexical string frequencies on large corpora. Outside the I.A. Baumgart supports John Nagel's Team Overbot which is competing in the DARPA grand challenge robot race across the Mojave desert. Inside the I.A. Baumgart supports extending the computer science 'research access' part of the Archive's mission to provide 'universal access to all human knowledge'. |
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Czeslaw Jan Grycz Curator of Books
"Chet" (much easier to pronounce than his full Polish name) came to the Internet Archive following a varied and successful career in academic and scholarly publishing, library research, and non-profit management. For six years immediately prior to joining the Internet Archive, Chet was CEO of Octavo, a company founded in 1997 by John Warnock (co-founder of Adobe Systems). Octavo specialized in ultra-high quality digitization of rare and extremely valuable books from leading libraries around the world. It provided access to those books through innovative electronic and published editions/collections for both scholarly use and the pleasure of the general public, setting a high bar for standards in digital book imaging and visualization. Prior to his tenure at Octavo, Chet was on the staff of the Office of the President of the University of California, for 14 years at the University Press, and for 6 with the Division of Library Automation. He has been active in the library community of Central and Eastern Europe through his participation in the non-profit organization Libraries Without Walls, and has produced a television program called Great Libraries of the World. Chet is also a widely-admired speaker and author of several articles and books on publishing technology and library-related topics. |
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Dan Avery Technical Product Manager, Archive-It, Web Archving Services Dan has been at the Archive since July 2004. Working on Archive-It gives Dan a way to apply his technical expertise and experience to ensuring that memory institutions achieve their objectives and fulfill their missions. Previously, Dan was a co-founder of an internet consulting company, a search engineer at a major search engine company, and a research scientist. |
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Eric Volpe System Administrator Eric has been running unix systems since 1986, and has a particular interest in doing things on a large scale -- big archives, big mail servers, etc. Prior to joining the Internet Archive, he was chief Systems Architect at Critical Path, where as one of the first engineers, he designed and patented a scalable email infrastructure which served tens of millions of end-users. When not at the Internet Archive, Eric is a photographer specializing in semi-abstract large format work, and exhibits in the Bay Area and elsewhere. Eric has a B.A. in German literature from the University of Rochester, and also enjoys tinkering with old motorcycles. |
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Gabe Juszel Digital Scanning Coordinator - Toronto Gabe Juszel has been running the Toronto Branch of the Internet Archive scanning centre, (out of the University of Toronto) a little over a year. He is heavily involved in the center's daily operations as well as donor liaison, as hundreds of books pass through his doors that are scanned and placed online. Prior to the Archive Gabe worked as an Assistant Director in Feature Films and Television for 6 years, through the Directors' Guild of Canada. He has a BA - Highest Honors Degree in Film Studies and has worked as a film preservationist/archivist for various Educational and Government institutions. Outside of the archive, Gabe enjoys being a painter, photographer and writer. He dreams about building the 3rd deathstar in order to rule the galaxy and finally get rid of those dammed Ewoks!!!!! |
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Gordon Mohr Chief Technologist, Web Group Gordon Mohr has been creating innovative applications for the Internet since 1995. Before joining the Internet Archive, Gordon founded and led Bitzi, a collaborative universal media catalog built by volunteers over the web. Previously, Gordon led the design and implementation of "Ding," an extensible all-Java peer-to-peer instant-messaging platform, for Activerse, an Austin-based startup acquired by CMGi in 1999. In 1995, Gordon helped create VisualWave, an early object-oriented web application server and development environment, for Sunnyvale-based ParcPlace Systems. |
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Igor Ranitovic Crawl Services Manager, Web Archiving Services Igor has been working with the Internet Archive since June of 2002. He came to the Internet Archive as a Data Archivist intern and in January of 2003 he became a full time employee in the Web group. Igor has a B.S. in computer science/mathematics from Birmingham-Southern College, and a M.S. in computer science from the University of San Francisco. Igor is originally form Novi Sad, SCG. He enjoys music, art and geeeeek soccer. |
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J. Mauthe Digital Scanning Coordinator - Bay Area As Digital Scanning Coordinator, J. is managing the daily operations of the Archive�s West Coast Scanning Center. It is her task to take hard copy books and turn them into Digital on-line masterpieces in a high volume operation. J. has been on the front line of publishing and retail distribution for 23 consecutive years. She has seen both sides the book business from managing large-scale retail and mail order book operations for Whole Earth Access to Associate Publisher for KQED Books, Sales and Marketing Coordinator for Hunter House Publishers and Editor for Cogito Learning Media. J has also built Internet businesses from the ground up for the two largest antiquarian bookstores in the Bay Area. J. discovered the Archive while researching her senior thesis on the digitization of libraries. Although J. is a recovering book hoarder by profession she is now a vocal advocate for open source materials. Her passion remains solidly linked to antiquarian books and their preservation |
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Jacques Cressaty Controller A long time transplant from France, Jacques' specialty is to organize businesses and keep their books straight. He joined the Internet Archive in 2001. Prior to that Jacques managed his wife's design firm. He has been a professional photographer since 1984 and is a published and exhibited artist. Most mornings, you will find him in his rowing shell in the middle of SF Bay. |
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Jim Shankland System Administrator Jim Shankland started working with computers in Ithaca, New York when a job driving a school bus fell through. He has been writing code for UNIX, FreeBSD, and Linux for over 20 years, and loves open-source software, but is frustrated that for all the technical progress, everything involving computers remains ten times as hard and a tenth as reliable as it ought to be. Jim has a B.A. in English from Wesleyan University, and a M.E. in computer science from Cornell University. |
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Joerg Bashir System Administrator Joerg Bashir has been supporting Internet operations for eight years. Prior to the Internet Archive, Joerg was a system administrator at Scale8 corporation. He oversaw four data centers located in the US, Europe and Asia. The sites consisted of large clusters of Linux servers providing Internet based large-scale storage and data delivery. Before Scale8, Joerg worked as an SA at Healtheon corporation, supporting Sun hardware and proprietary clustered healthcare applications software. By 1997, Joerg was working at GMAC, supporting their home lending division. Prior to GMAC, he worked at Bell Atlantic Business Systems Services. At BABSS, he was part of a new remote management initiative to outsource IT monitoring and administration for various large Fortune 500 corporations. |
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John Berry VP of Operations John Berry is a veteran technology executive, having served as a CTO, VP of Engineering, and technology consultant for companies such as Planet U, Zatso, IBM, Rational, and AT&T.; He has over 20 years experience building highly reliable distributed systems. He earned his B.S. from the University of Maryland. |
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John Lee Project Manager, Web Group John has been developing software and managing projects for about 11 years. Most recently, he managed development and operations in a genomics lab at UC Berkeley, writing bioinformatics software and building Linux and Mac OS X compute clusters. John previously held software engineering positions at SGI and Apple, and served as lead server architect for the first- and second-generation wireless Palm handhelds. He has also spent some time coding in Amsterdam, skiing in Tahoe, and running marathons. |
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Karl Thiessen Testing and Automation Engineer Karl has a knack for hanging around with people who are making the world a better place, so it's really no surprise that he wound up at the Internet Archive. A colleague said of him once: "We were changing the world before changing the world was cool." From helping to provide the first free UNIX services to students at UC Berkeley, to bringing the most effective HIV-prevention programs in San Francisco to the Web, to assisting engineers in designing earthquake-proof buildings, Karl has a fierce commitment to using computers to improve (and sometimes save) the lives of people. |
| Kris Carpenter Director, Web Archive Kris Carpenter joined the Internet Archive as Director of the Web Archive in September 2006. In her role, she works closely with national libraries, archives and universities to provide technical expertise and services in web archiving and web search. Prior to joining the Internet Archive, Kris worked in the high-tech-industry, for-profit sector. For the last 15 years, she divided her time between the online consumer and business-to-business services and software sectors. She is a recognized expert in web search, ecommerce marketplaces and transactional services. For the majority of her career Kris has served in product and general management roles for venture-backed Silicon Valley start-ups. Kris has a Bachelor of Arts and a Masters in Organizational Behavior from Stanford University. |
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Kristine Hanna Director, Web Archiving Services Kristine Hanna is the Director for Web Archiving Services, working with partners to develop web archiving services and solutions that will help preserve the internet. She is particularly passionate about saving "at risk" websites and collections. Kristine has been working on the internet since 1997 when she co-founded GirlGeeks, a career site for women in technology, which was flipped to a non profit in 2002. For the last four years she has held senior level and management positions in online content and business development in media and educational internet companies. Before founding GirlGeeks, Kristine worked extensively in film and television at Lucasfilm, (Colossal) Pictures, and Lorimar/Warner Brothers; and attended USC's School of Cinema and Television. She has earned two team Emmy Awards, as well as two individual Emmy nominations as the Visual Effects Producer on "The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles". |
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Linda Frueh Regional Director, Washington D.C. Linda is an 18-year veteran of Silicon Valley technology companies with experience in strategic planning, partnership development and general management. She joined the Archive in Washington with the mission to support our partnerships with federal agencies and other DC-based organizations. Before joining us Linda was a partner with a technology incubator and consulting firm, held Vice President positions at the public companies Lexar Media and Network General Corporation, and was a Board member for several internet startups. She began her career in Washington as a technical assistant at the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Linda holds a BS in physics from MIT and an MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business. |
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Mario Murphy Books Processing Engineer Previous to the Archive, he was "Systems Manager" at Octavo were many very rare & valuable books were digitized for preservation and access. He's also worked at Apple Computer as a High Level Quality Test Engineer, and at the Berkeley Macintosh User's Group where anyone could find help with their Mac, and then the internet happened. |
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Michael Earle Facilities Manager / Jr. System Administrator Michael came to the Internet Archive from Olson and Company Steel where he worked as an Estimator/Project Manager. Prior to that, Michael was the Operations Manager at Scale8 where he designed, built and managed multiple data center both domestically and internationally. He received a BA in Psychology from UC Berkeley. |
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Michael Stack Software Engineer Michael works mostly on Heritrix, the Archive's open-source crawler. He has always had a fascination for postulates such as "information wants to be free" and "property is theft", so it's not surprising that he breaks out in goose bumps whenever he hears the Internet Archive motto "Universal Access to All Human Knowledge (for Free, for Ever)." In the past, Michael has been a sysadmin (once), stage manager, a not-very-good dishwasher, director of engineering (twice), laborer (demolition mostly), and software engineer (three or four times). |
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Molly Bragg Partner Specialist, Web Archiving Services Molly has been working at the Internet Archive since May 2003. Working with Archive-It gives Molly a great opportunity to expose memory institutions to the importance and methods of web archiving. She also enjoys helping make Internet technology important for and understandable to everyone. Before coming to the Archive, Molly worked for Hostelling International (a non-profit organization with youth hostels worldwide) at two of their San Francisco hostels. Molly graduated from San Francisco State University cum laude with a B.A. in English. In her spare time, Molly studies philosophy with a committed reading group and plans to take up the cello again any day now. |
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Mouse Dog Mouse came from Central Park, all mangy & hairless. He weighed almost nothing and was in very poor health. Then Trish rescued him and brought him back to four pounds of health. Then Trish thought that he would have a better life in California and brought him to his new home in Oakland. Now he spends his days basking in the sunlight and trying his best to play with his new sisters, Hannah & Echo. They despise his slightness and wish they too could fit into tiny spaces. Until Mouse learns how to drive, he is happy to commute to work with his housemate, Mario. |
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Paul Forrest Hickman Office Manager Paul lived in Minneapolis before coming here to the Archive. Paul has worked as a shoeshiner, bulk mailhouse worker, food service person, poet, done admin work at a Foundation and caught clothes at a burlesque show, all for pay. And that was just one year. Now, Paul lives in the Bay Area, skipping winter for the first time ever! Paul earned a B.A. from Oberlin (oh man, it wasn�t easy) and is uneasily looking forward to getting a Masters someday. Now, Paul reads a lot, cooks and bakes. And then eats it. |
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Paul Jack Software Engineer Paul Jack has written and maintained software applications for organizations ranging from community nonprofits to the world's largest banks. He produced a cable access show on which he invited strangers into his home and then wrote poems for them, made an independent gay sci-fi action adventure superhero movie in his living room, and in general strives to be the strangest person you'll ever meet. |
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Renata Ewing Collections Program Manager Renata will be writing her bio, any day now. |
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Robert Miller Director of Books Robert Miller heads up the Archive�s global book digitization project. In this role, he will work closely with the partner libraries to ensure their needs are met by his digitization team as collections are scanned, processed and posted back to the web. Prior to the Archive, Robert co-founded 5 consumer product start up companies bringing over 85 products to market in the US, Europe and Australia. In addition he was CEO of FocusEngine, a VC funded search engine company. He has been featured in various publications such as the New York Times, WSJ, Inc and CNN. Robert has two Fortune 500 company experiences rising to sr. management roles in both Mattel Toys and AMP/Tyco. Robert holds a BS in Industrial Engineering from Lehigh University in Pa. He sits on the board of the Marin based non-profit; Youth in Arts. Robert brings multi-cultural experience into the Archive; having lived in Afghanistan and Germany; and worked extensively in Asia. |
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Simon Carless Data Archivist Simon is an editor and writer when not helping out at the Archive, and currently acts as managing editor for videogame industry website Gamasutra, part of the CMP Game Group. As well as authoring the book Gaming Hacks for technical publishers O'Reilly, he has previously worked as one of the editors for popular tech website Slashdot as well as a videogame designer for companies including Eidos Interactive and Atari. |
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Steve Software Engineer Steve is helping to write software for the petabox, and the books group. He learned to program from his friends that make software for spacecraft. He's interested in sustainable living practices and playing stringed instruments with other folks, and hopes we can start colonizing space real soon. |
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Stewart Cheifet Director of Collections Stewart Cheifet has been an attorney, a media executive, and a technology journalist. He has worked in various capacities for ABC, CBS, NPR, and PBS in the United States, Europe, Asia and the South Pacific. He has managed broadcast radio and television stations and was CEO of several media production and distribution companies. He was former Executive Producer and host of the PBS series Computer Chronicles and Net Caf�. He has served as President of PCTV, a company focused on broadcast and new media production in the field of personal technology. He holds a B.S. in mathematics and psychology from the University of Southern California, a J.D. from Harvard Law School, and he was a post-graduate fellow in technology journalism at the University of Chicago. |
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Stuart Blair Imaging Engineer Stu joined the Archive's Books Project in the spring of 2005, an avid reader enthralled with the dream of the Open Library. Focusing on image quality, he developed the Scribe image processing, color management, and camera management software, and consulted on the scanner lighting system. An entrepreneur and technology leader, he's a veteran of two successful startups. He was co-founder and President of LaserTools, a company known for high-performance and high-quality printing technologies that was acquired by Adobe Systems. Later, he co-founded and served as CTO of Nimblefish, which developed and markets the leading high-response direct marketing system used by many Fortune 500 customers. |
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Tracey Jaquith Web Engineer Tracey was a founding coder and the system architect for the Internet Archive in 1996, writing multi-threaded servers and crawlers, as well as parallel processing code. She continued on with the company and Alexa Internet. In 2000, she left for four years to follow her Cornell mentor, Dan Huttenlocher, and was a technical lead and founding engineer at a financial services software startup. She returned to the Internet Archive in October 2004 and is most excited about being at a non-profit and doing digital video. Tracey holds a Master's and Bachelor's degree in computer science from Cornell University where she focused on machine vision and robotics.
Outside of work, she is a road biker, political webmaster and volunteer, DVD and VCD producer, and time-lapse digital photography enthusiast. |
Board of Directors
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Brewster Kahle Board Chair |
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Kathleen Burch Board Secretary Kathleen Burch has decades of experience in non-profit management, strategic thinking, and community activation, all to serve her passion and commitment to universal literacy and book publishing. After studies at Mills College in Oakland in English Literature and and graduate work in the Book Arts department, she founded a type & design studio and an independent publishing house, Burning Books, both of which thrived in San Francisco throughout the eighties. An understanding of the community's needs, along with her value for arts organizations, book arts and social entrepreneuring, drove Burch to go on to co-found the San Francisco Center for the Book in 1996. She now serves as its board vice-chair and on the executive committee in perpetuity. Besides sitting on several other community-based boards, she also chaired the board of Pro Arte Libri, an international arts organization devoted to the art of fine bookmaking. She has practiced symbolic communication through typographic languages since 1974, publishing the works of big thinkers such as John Cage, Robert Ashley, Yoko Ono, Laurie Anderson, and her own work on game theory and the culture of card-playing, with recent studies in the Visual Criticism department at California College of Art in San Francisco. Her work with Burning Books was the subject of a retrospective exhibition at Mills College in 1996. She was a Xerox PARC artist-in-residence in 2000. |
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Rick Prelinger Board President Rick Prelinger prelinger.com, an archivist, writer and filmmaker, founded Prelinger Archives, whose collection of 51,000 advertising, educational, industrial, and amateur films was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002 after 20 years' operation. Rick has partnered with the Internet Archive to make 2,000 films from Prelinger Archives available online for free viewing, downloading and reuse. With the Voyager Company, a pioneer new media publisher, he produced fourteen laserdiscs and CD-ROMs with material from his archives, including "Ephemeral Films," the "Our Secret Century" series and "Call It Home: The House That Private Enterprise Built," a laserdisc on the hostory of suburbia and suburban planning. Rick has taught in the MFA Design program at New York's School of Visual Arts and lectured widely on American cultural and social history and on issues of cultural and intellectual property access. He sits on the National Film Preservation Board as representative of the Association of Moving Image Archivists and is Board President of the Internet Archive and also the San Francisco Cinematheque. His feature-length film "Panorama Ephemera," depicting the conflicted landscapes of 20th-century America, opened in summer 2004. He is co-founder of the Prelinger Library, an appropriation-friendly reference library located in San Francisco. |
Archived Archivists
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Aryana Farsai Roborough SCRIBE Technical Support Aryana F. Roxborough has been involved in supporting hardware and software for 8 years, first interning at CBS Marketwatch in San Francisco, and then later working in the Klystron Department at SLAC, where she supported enterprise software and hardware. She has previously been a bamboo propagation manager, collective bakery and cafe entreprenuer, and self-defense instructor. After work, and between tech positions, she enjoys organic gardening and natural building with and emphasis on alternative energy and sustainable development. She is a graduate of the New College of California Culture, Ecology, and Sustainable Community program and currently lives in an urban eco-village located in Oakland, CA. Hobbies include making mosaics, ceramanic sculpture, riding and wrenching classic Honda motorcycles, and electronic music. |
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Beatrice Murch Executive Assistant / Development Coordinator Beatrice comes to the Internet Archive with five years of non-profit administration experience, working with both non-profits and foundations. She claims to understand technology and has had a web presence since 1996 in some form or another, which you can check out courtesy of the Wayback Machine. She enjoys working in the non-profit sector and making the world a better place. She believes that universal access to all knowledge is a worthy goal and enjoys creating that reality. In the late 1990s, Willamette University gave her a B.A. in art history and French literature with a minor in mathematics. Apart from work, Beatrice enjoys travelling, political activism and geeking out with her friends. www.murch-sitaker.org |
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Bernardo Elayda Technical Support Enginner When Bernardo was not looking at crawls of the web, he's a graduate student at University of San Francisco. And because he is a big fan of art, he volunteers as a webmaster for Art Design San Francisco.
Turn-ons : Open Source, cognative learning systems, sushi, tapas
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Joel Krauska Cluster Hacker Joel has been hacking on Linux systems and networks since 1994, and as a youth he ran a BBS out of his bedroom. He joined the archive in 2006 to help support the Petabox cluster. Past careers include Network Engineer for BBN/Genuity and Network Architect for Exodus Communications. More recently he has spent time as an embedded systems engineer, open source evangelist and doing cluster application research at Cisco Systems. Outside of the archive, Joel enjoys sailing on the San Francisco Bay, skiing in Tahoe and supporting local theater. He has a BS and MS in Telecommunications Engineering from the University of Illinois. |
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Mark Johnson Lead Engineer, Books Group Mark started at the Internet Archive in the Books Group, first writing the Java user interface for the Scribe scanning machine, and then the PHP image processing pipeline. His core expertise is in server-side Java/database applications where he spent 10 years consulting for large businesses, startups, and open source projects. In his spare time, Mark enjoys travelling to far away places, teaching, and playing with high voltage electricity. |
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Michele Kimpton Director of Web Archive Michele Kimpton has been a Director at the Internet Archive for three years. In her role, she works closely with national libraries, archives and universities to provide technical expertise and services in web archiving. She has developed partnerships with several of these institutions to collaborate on web archiving activities, including co-founding the International Internet Preservation Consortium. Prior to the Internet Archive, Michele worked in the high-tech-industry, mainly for-profit sector, for the last 20 years. Before coming to the Internet Archive she was one of the co-founders of an online digital imaging company, which was subsequently bought by one of the larger photo imaging companies. For the last ten years of her career she has worked primarily in technical management and business development. She has worked and lived in both Europe and Asia during her career. Michele has a Masters in mechanical engineering from Lehigh University, and a Masters of Business Administration from University of Santa Clara. |
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Molly Davis Books Project Manager As an experienced animator, Molly Davis ran her own animation business as well as a design collective in San Francisco for four years. She came to the Internet Archive with a background in creating things for the Internet, as well as a strong record of running organizations. Molly received her B.F.A. from Florida State University and in her spare time djs on KALX Berkeley kalx.berkeley.edu and draws monsters www.rawr.net. |
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Parker Thompson Data Archivist Parker worked with the Internet Archive from 2003 to 2005. He came to the Internet Archive as an intern in the Web group working on the Heritrix web crawler, and in May of 2004 became a full time employee in the collections group, where he built systems for storing and distributing digital collections (audio, video, software, texts, etc), and worked with owners of large collections to organize and include their data in the Internet Archive. Before coming to the Internet Archive, Parker worked for a small consulting company as a project manager/developer, and as a programmer for a large university developing CRM and knowledge management software. Parker holds a Master's degreee in information management and systems from the University of California, Berkeley as well as a B.A. (political science) and B.S. (informatics) from the University of Washington. |
| Roxane Williams Books Processing Engineer Roxane has been working with computers since 1995, starting as a desktop hardware technician, then doing top tier hardware technical support at Digital Equipment Corporation, and most recently was a senior web developer at Zone Labs. She used magic to get books into the Internet Archive as well as support the book scanning operation's hardware systems. In her free time, Roxane likes to read and ride motorcycles, but not at the same time. |