Aaron Ximm
Engineer
Aaron joined the Archive in 2011, where he aims to assist
with the alchemy of converting ephemera into artifacts. As
an artist, Aaron is interested in documentation and its
possibilities.
Alexis Rossi
Director of Web Services (Content & Access)
Alexis is on her second tour of duty at the Internet
Archive, working on a program to archive the entire
Internet and thinking about questions like "what does 'the
entire Internet' mean?" and "do we really want it ALL?"
Alexis currently manages all aspects of Internet Archive
collections work for movies, audio, TV, and books, and runs
the Wayback Machine
project. From 2006-2008, Alexis managed the audio and video
collections and Open
Library, as well as working on the Open Content
Alliance, and the Zotero/IA
project.
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), worked as the Editorial
Director at Alexa
Internet, and as Product Manager at Mixercast. Alexis
has an MLIS, concentrating on web technologies and
interfaces, and enjoys making jewelry, dancing, and baking
Cookie Smackdown-winning cookies.
Andy Bezella
Senior Systems Administrator
Andy enjoys working and playing with linux (and solaris,
too) in environments small and large. He graduated from
Carleton College in 1996 with a degree in math, and has
lived in or near most of the major metropolises of the
upper midwest: Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Chicago, umm...
Minneapolis again. Andy shares the stereotypical interests
of fantasy, sci-fi, and electronic music, but also likes
both cats and dogs, t'ai chi and chai tea.
Brewster Kahle Digital
Librarian and Founder
Brewster Kahle, Digital Librarian and Founder of the
Internet Archive, has been working to provide universal
access to all knowledge for more than twenty-five
years.
Since the mid-1980s, Kahle has focused on developing
technologies for information discovery and digital
libraries. In 1989 Kahle invented the Internet's first
publishing system, WAIS (Wide Area Information Server)
system and in 1989, founded WAIS Inc., a pioneering
electronic publishing company that was sold to America
Online in 1995. In 1996, Kahle founded the Internet Archive
which may be the largest digital library. At the same time,
he co-founded Alexa Internet which helps catalog the Web in
April 1996, which was sold to Amazon.com in 1999.
Kahle earned a B.S. from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) in 1982. As a student, he studied
artificial intelligence with W. Daniel Hillis and Marvin
Minsky. In 1983, Kahle helped start Thinking Machines, a
parallel supercomputer maker, serving there as a lead
engineer for six years. He serves on the boards of the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, Public Knowledge, the
European Archive, the Television Archive, and the Internet
Archive.
Chris Butler
Office Manager
An unrepentant dilettante, Chris has successfully parlayed
his twin degrees in Environmental Science and Film Studies
into a near decade of slumming around various non-profits
in the SF Bay and Detroit Metro Areas. During that time, he
has fought with and cleaned up after little kids, made sure
the supply cabinet wasn't out of paperclips, and helped
manage high-level legal issues and inquiries from federal
and international law enforcement. As a fan of things that
are preposterously good, Chris' involvement with the
Archive has been a natural fit. The interests of the moment
are tai chi, other "internal" martial arts, and pushing the
socially-acceptable limits of film snobbery.
Christine Wagner
NY Scanning Center Loader
A love of books and reading and working experience in both
a library and bookstore made it an easy decision to want to
join the Internet Archive in July 2009. Christine had
previously spent 4 years in the retail art supply business.
She has a degree in fashion design from the Fashion
Institute of Technology in NYC but has been working towards
a career as a fine artist. In addition to her job at the
Archive she also programs and curates an art gallery in
Newark, NJ and freelances as an artist's assistant and
consultant.
Dominic Dela
Cruz Web Crawl Engineer
Dominic studied Political Science at the University of
California at Riverside because he wanted to figure out why
democracies succeed. He still can't tell you why, but he
can tell you that restricting access to information is the
first step in their failure. Dominic joined the Internet
Archive in April 2008. Before that, he worked for the
independent online news magazine Salon.com as a software
engineer. The Archive lets him play with his favorite
technologies like Gnu/Linux and internet-based
applications. He is also a mammal who enjoys running,
biking, and reading about the history of
science/technology.
Gabe Juszel
Digital Scanning Coordinator - Toronto/Edmonton
Degree - B.A - Highest Honors - Cinema
Gabe has worked as an Archivist for the Library and Archives of Canada (Audio Acquisition and Research Section)and numerous academic/research institutions. From Ottawa, he moved to Toronto to work on Feature Films and Television as an Assistant Director for the D.G.C. for 6 years. He still works on feature films in his spare time and has been the Canadian Regional Scanning Coordinator with Internet Archive Canada - based out of the University of Toronto - since 2004..
Gemma Waterson
Satellite Coordinator
Gemma joined the Archive in 2008, as a scanner at the
Natural History Museum in London. She then moved on to
become the Satellite Coordinator, where she gets to work
with many of the fascinating libraries and collections
we're working with around the world. Gemma was born in the
UK, but grew up the fine state of Texas, where she
graduated from the University of Texas. She has been back
in the UK since '08, and has spent her time there
digitizing, meeting amazing people, and perfecting the
perfect muffin recipe.
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.
Hank Bromley
Software Engineer
Hank is enjoying his second helping of computers, having
taken refuge in the social sciences and academia for two
decades after a stint of AI work (at AT&T; Bell Labs) in
the 1980s, and now taking refuge from academia and the
social sciences by plunging back into the geek realm.
Although the work was fun the first time around, it did
nothing to make the world a better place, thus the detour
into grad school and faculty life; this time, it's not only
fun (and a bit addictive), it's got Purpose. The Archive
rocks. Since 2007 Hank has been supporting the books
project at various points from book ingest, through
processing, to web presentation of the results.
Hank has S.B. degrees from MIT in math and computer
science, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Educational Policy
Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is
answerable for the books Lisp Lore: A Guide to
Programming the Lisp Machine, and
Education/Technology/Power: Educational Computing as a
Social Practice (co-edited with Michael W. Apple).
Hunter Stern
Technical Support and Quality Assurance
Hunter provides technical support for Archive-It and works
with the engineering and product development teams to
ensure that each release is thoroughly tested. Previously,
he worked at macys.com and Autodesk. He has an Economics
degree from the University of California, San Diego and in
his spare time, enjoys writing fiction and attending
writing meetups.
Jacques
Cressaty Director of Finance
A long time
transplant from France, Jacques joined the Internet Archive
in 2001. He brings financial and administrative expertise,
as well as a highly developed sense of order, to his
position. Jacques is a published and exhibited landscape
photographer. Most mornings you will find him sculling in
SF Bay.
Jeff Kaplan
Web Marketing & Collections Manager
Jeff joined the Internet Archive in 2010 to collaborate on
SEO and Social Media efforts. Prior to joining the Archive,
he worked for as a Creative Director and Senior Designer at
several marketing-communication firms in San Francisco. He
holds a B.F.A from California College of the Arts, and most
recently has focused his studies on website design, UI, SEO
and Social Media. Outside of work, he enjoys playing
Scruggs-style banjo in local bluegrass bands and surfing
along the Northern California coast.
Jeff Sharpe
Midwest Regional Scanning Center Coordinator
Jeff's work experience in administration and research led him to the
Coordinator position at the digitization center in the Allen County Public
Library in Fort Wayne Indiana. He's proud of his role in assisting to put
tens of thousands of books online for universal access. He is a voracious
reader, and loves books. He has a love of Archaeology and is particularly
fascinated with Mayan civilization, and has traveled extensively visiting
Mayan ruins. He enjoys hanging out with his wife and two kids, and spends
much of his spare time trying to keep one of his two dogs from destroying
his garden and eating his flowers. He’s an eclectic collector, and
recently added some interesting new additions to his brick collection. He
has a Bachelors Degree from Indiana University in Bloomington 1984.
Jesse Bell
Digital Scanning Supervisor
Jesse joined Internet Archive in July of 2009 as the
Digital Scanning Supervisor for the 300 Funston Scanning
Center at Archive headquarters. After graduating from
Pennsylvania State University in 2001 with a degree in
English, he moved to San Jose, CA to participate in an
Americorps program working with elementary school students.
He then moved on to the video game industry where worked
for Electronic Arts and Namco Bandai Games America, getting
the opportunity to travel abroad. Jesse knows more about
music than anything else. And you can find him on a bike,
on a trail, or in a tent on the weekends and holidays.
Jude Coelho
Books Group Process Engineering Manager
It has been Jude Coelho's pleasure to work for the Internet
Archive since 2008, when he started as a Book Scanner. He
is the Process Engineering Manager for the Books Group,
working out of Archive headquarters in San Francisco, and,
before that, he served as Coordinator for the regional
scanning center in Princeton. His duties include designing
new processes and software tools to increase efficiency and
productivity in the Archive's book scanning operations,
supporting these operations with tech support and
troubleshooting, and wrangling red rows. Jude, a
self-taught programmer and former punk rock musician,
currently enjoys comic books to a degree that is probably
inappropriate for a man in his thirties. He resides in
Petaluma, CA with his wife and three children.
June Goldsmith Director of
Administration
June joined the Internet Archive without knowing bits from
bites. She started her career as a chef and event planner
eventually graduating into development, stewardship, and
donor relations. Non-profits do not run on cache alone and
she hopes to improve outreach and development for the
Archive. Outside of work, her other interests are foreign
and domestic ice cream, competitive sleeping, and Biscuit
the dog.
Ken Le Tran
Systems Administrator
Ken has worked at a number of different large corporations
including AMD, Microsoft, Cisco Systems and JDSU. But
thoroughly enjoys the challenge of working at the Archive
where there is always something new to learn and do every
single day!! He enjoys his free time being outdoors and
traveling.
Kenji Nagahashi
Web Collections Software Engineer
After working for a Japanese computer company as a
researcher for 17 years, Kenji joined the Internet Archive
in August 2010 to implement a system archiving everything
on the Internet. Being a positively lazy engineer,
enthusiastic about making computers work for humans with
least effort, he likes mixing tools and programming
languages to get things done. Loves handicrafts, cooks
pasta and bakes biscotti.
Kristine
Hanna Director, Archiving Services
Kristine Hanna is Director, Archiving Services at Internet Archive. She is the founding Program Director for Archive-It, a web archiving service first deployed in 2006 and currently used by over 319 institutions in 48 states. She also oversees IA's work with national and international partners on contract and collaborative web archiving initiatives. Before joining the Archive in January of 2006, she held senior level and management positions in online content and business development in media and educational internet companies, including Lucasfilm, (Colossal) Pictures, and Lorimar/Warner Brothers, and co-founded GirlGeeks, a career site for women in technology, which was flipped to a non profit in 2002. She has also been nominated multiple times for an Emmy from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.
Lori Donovan
Partner Specialist, Web Archiving Services
Lori graduated from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor
with a Masters of Science in Information, specializing in
Archives and Digital Preservation. She previously studied
history and political science at Boise State University.
She is very excited to be working at a mission-based
organization and helping libraries, archives and other
cultural institutions fulfill their own missions by
archiving the web. In her spare time, Lori enjoys cooking,
running and tv shows on dvd.
Maria P. LaCalle
Partner Specialist
Maria has an MA in History with a certificate in Archives
from NYU and is a Certified Archivist with the Academy of
Certified Archivists. In her past positions, she was the
Digitization Project Manager at the American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee, where she managed all aspects of a
large-scale text digitization project. Prior to this, Maria
was Senior Archivist at Rolling Stone magazine, where she
managed the digitization of the magazine's back catalog.
Maria recently moved back to San Francisco after many years
living in NYC. She enjoys exploring the Bay Area, reading,
knitting and spending time with friends and family.
Michelle Krasowski
Collections
Michelle joined the archive after volunteering for a year on the Ephemeral VHS digitization team. She
fell into the Librarian profession as a lover of trivia and random information who had no idea what to
do with her life. She has worked for the past 10 years in the public library sphere, where her passion
for empowering people through free information blended nicely with her favorite pastimes of reading
out loud to people, instructing them in various craft activities, and peeking into the inner workings of
their brains through the tool of conversation. When away from the digital world, she goes camping,
makes art of one kind or another, stares at intricately patterned textiles, and shares her enthusiasm
for the fascinating world of plants as a docent at the San Francisco Botanical Gardens.
Noah Levitt
Web Crawl Engineer
Noah joined the Archive in October 2007. He does
development and administration mostly around the Archive-It
service. Previously he worked at Columbia University on
digital library projects. Before that, in 2001, he got his
BS in computer engineering from the University of Michigan.
Noah is an advocate of all things free and open, including
software, information, and society in general.
Raj Kumar
Engineer
Raj writes open source software for the book scanning,
BookServer, Open Library, and Petabox projects.
Ralf Muehlen
Cluster Engineer
Ralf develops software to run on the petabox cluster. For
many years, he has led the SFLan project, trying to build a
fast and free wireless network in San Francisco. Ralf is an
avid bicyclist and hiker.
Robert Miller
Global Director of Books
Robert Miller leads the Internet Archive's global eBooks
digitization project as Global Director of Books. In this
capacity, he has three main roles; establishing and
maintaining the relationships between all categories of
Libraries and funding partners, building and managing the
teams that perform the digitization, and evangelizing
within the library community to move more items from
non-digital to digital. Robert brings a blend of Fortune
500 management experience and successful start up company
talents to the non-profit community.
Robert, in 7 years, has built the Internet Archive team
from a single test location to a world class operation
where eBook digitization is now being performed in 7
countries at 33 locations. Over 500 library partners and
content providers have worked with the Internet Archive
ranging from the Library of Congress, Harvard University,
the Natural History Museum in London to Zhejiang University
in Hangzhou.
Prior to joining the Internet Archive, Robert co-founded
or was a principal in 5 consumer product start up companies
bringing over 85 products to market in the US, Europe and
Australia. In addition to building sales, marketing and
product development teams, he also established supply chain
networks between Asia and North America. During this
period, Robert was hired to be the CEO of FocusEngine, a VC
funded, Israeli search engine startup that pioneered a
fine-grained ASP search technology.
Robert honed his business expertise prior to this period
with 15 years at two Fortune 500 companys; with rapid
career growth in each company; Mattel Toys (consumer
products) and AMP/Tyco (electronics). His domestic and
international roles encompassed brand management,
engineering and manufacturing and sales.
Robert has been featured in various media such as the
New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Inc and has
appeared on TV networks such as ABC, NBC, CNN and QVC. He
is a frequent speaker at numerous North American and
International conferences.
Robert's board experience includes the California based
non-profit; Youth in Arts. Robert also is a key member of
the AFS Global Innovation Team; AFS is the worlds largest
student exchange program.
Robert brings multi-cultural experience to the Internet
Archive; having worked extensively through out Asia and
Europe.
He was an American Field Service Scholarship recipient
and lived in Kabul, Afghanistan and subsequently worked and
lived in Germany; where he studied Farsi and German
respectively.
Robert holds a BS in Industrial Engineering from Lehigh
University in Pennsylvania USA.
Roger
Macdonald Director, Television Archive
Roger joined the Internet Archive to help create an open
digital public library of TV news, providing a means to
thoughtfully reflect upon the most pervasive and persuasive
medium of our time. Certainly no coincidence that he had
spent the previous eleven years helping to manage the
nation's largest independent noncommercial TV network, Link
TV. Prior to co-founding the network devoted to global news
and culture in1999, Roger helped create and manage several
other organizations engaged in addressing international
challenges, often through media, including the Gorbachev
Foundation. His favorite quote:
Be ashamed to die until
you have won some victory for humanity. -- Horace
Mann, abolitionist; father of U.S. public education; and
founder of Antioch College.
Samuel Stoller
Cluster Engineer
Samuel is a software engineer and Unix systems
administrator.
Scott Reed
Partner Specialist
Scott is excited to work at the Internet Archive, assisting
archivists and librarians across the world to preserve the
web for future generations using Archive-It. Previously,
Scott was the Community Technology Lead at a service agency
for homeless families. He received a BA in Feminist Studies
from UC Santa Cruz where his undergraduate research project
was focused on the work of digital literacy training
programs in Kano, Nigeria. Lately he has been baking
bagels, writing, country western dancing, and reading
fiction.
Sean Fagan
Scanning supervisor
graduated from RPI in 2004 with a degree in Product Design.
After bouncing around the country in his trusty Mustang
"Mac" for 3 years, he ended up in Los Angeles acting in
some well known Hollywood productions. Some of the
characters in his portfolio include "Audience Member 437"
on the second season of "don't forget the lyrics", and
"Sleeping Audience Member" on "Are you smarter than a 5th
grader?". Coming to hate the drudgery of celebrity life, he
answered a craigslist add in 2007 for the position of "book
scanner" at the Internet Archive. Now a supervisor at the
Physical Archive in Richmond, CA, Sean spends most of his
time organizing material for scanning in the San Francisco
center as well as the Shenzhen center in China.
Shelia DeRoche
Digital Scanning Supervisor
Shelia has been scanning, cataloging, and / or providing
quality assurance with Internet Archive since 2009. An avid
reader and librophiliac, she takes great joy in the
fascinating books she's able to read and digitize every day
at work. Before joining the Archive, Shelia interned at the
Louisiana Democratic Party while getting her Bachelor's
Degree in Political Science from LSU.
Stacy
Argondizzo Regional Operations Manager
Stacy has been with the Archive since 2007 and is presently
heading up the Princeton Scanning Center. Previous to that,
Stacy spent fifteen years working alongside reputable
corporations within various creative arenas in the fields
of production, archiving, photography, printing and rich
media for the web. More than five of those very years were
specifically dedicated to managing content for Getty
Images.
Sylvie Rollason-Cass Partner
Specialist
Sylvie is happy to be supporting Archive-It partner
institutions' web archiving programs. She holds a Master of
Science in Library and Information Science from the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where she
focused on Special Collections and Preservation. Before
coming to the Internet Archive, she worked as a Graduate
Project Assistant in the preservation department of the U
of I library and as a library assistant at the Newberry
Library in Chicago. In her spare time, Sylvie is learning to play the accordion and enjoys running,
singing, and dragon boating.
Theresa
Zhang Accounts Receivable & Payable
Specialist
loves to play with numbers and has been providing
full-cycle accounting services to various companies for
more than ten years. Her accounting expertise helps the
problem-soving and decision-making process of the company's
financial system, and ensures the accuracy of
record-keeping of the accounting system.
Tim Bigelow
New England Regional Digitization Coordinator
Tim has been with the Archive since 2008, starting as a
book scanner working his way up to the New England Regional
Digitization Coordinator. Tim has always had a strong love
for books as well as roadtrips, wine, abandoned buildings,
museums, hiking, The Kardashians, spending time with
friends and spoiling his dog Laqueesha. He hopes to one day
travel to Armenia. He has a Bachelors degree from Franklin
Pierce University.
Tomika Anderson
Manager of Administration
Tomika Anderson is a passionate nonprofit professional who has served the sector for over 11 years
in a variety of roles. A two-time National Service alum through AmeriCorps, Ms. Anderson has a deep
love for and devotion to philanthropy and service. She is dedicated to helping nonprofits further their
missions through great organization, strategic management and communication. She has worked for
local nonprofits, at a Kansas City area Boy's Group Home; national nonprofits, at Playworks and the
Nonprofit Leadership Alliance; and international nonprofits, at Architecture for Humanity and now the
Internet Archive. Ms. Anderson received her Masters in Public Administration in Nonprofit
Management from the University of Missouri-Kansas City and her Bachelors of Science from William
Jewell College in Liberty, MO. Outside of work, she is a huge fan of Major League Baseball, is a
classically trained pianist, and loves traveling both throughout the US and beyond. She is thrilled to be
serving the Archive's Administrative team as the organization continues to grow and provide free
access of digital information to the world!
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 has worked on political campaigns
and is a road biker, seamstress, video producer, and
time-lapse digital photography enthusiast. She adores two
longhaired, beautiful, clawed balls of fluff at home and
defies her diagnosed cat allergy. poohBot.com
Trevor von Stein
Systems administrator / archivist/
Trevor was drawn to Internet Archive by the warm flickering glow of ephemeral
television, specifically the Marion Stokes collection. He also is an experienced
systems administrator and hardware technician, but from a monoculture of Apple
systems. The curtain has been pulled away and he is now diving linux systems
administration and hardware ops. Trevor divides his time between petabox and tv
news projects. Outside of the Archive, he enjoys sailing and photography.
Vinay Goel
Senior Data Engineer
Vinay joined the Internet Archive's Web Group in 2006. At
the Archive, he has run focused crawls, deployed web
archive access and index infrastructures and developed
automated tools to help improve the quality of web crawls,
and to extract and analyze large portions of the Web
Archive. He also administers the Web Group's Hadoop cluster
and applies big data solutions to gain insights from web
scale datasets.
He graduated from Lehigh University with a M.S. in
Computer Science. While at Lehigh, he researched techniques
to combat web spam, and mobility management schemes in
Disruption Tolerant Networking. Outside the office, he
enjoys exploring the outdoors and has a thorough love of
food, movies and books.
Wendy Hanamura
Director of Partnerships
Wendy Hanamura joined the Internet Archive in 2014 as the Director of Partnerships. Her first goal is to help build a new institute where brilliant developers can come work with the Archive's big data sets. At the Archive, Wendy hopes to use her storytelling skills to share the remarkable stories locked in its collections. Previously, as Chief Digital Officer of KCETLink and Link TV, the national non-profit media network, Wendy led diverse teams producing television series, apps, a semantic platform for global videos, international film contests and documentaries - all in the service of social change.
Wendy began her career in journalism as a photo editor for Time magazine. She's reported and produced television content around the world for CBS, World Monitor Television, NHK (Japanese Broadcasting Corporation), and PBS. Her favorite project remains Honor Bound: A Personal Journey, the documentary she produced about her father and his storied unit, the Japanese American 442nd Regimental Combat Team. Wendy graduated summa cum laude from Harvard University where she majored in East Asian Studies and Visual and Environmental Studies; then she studied architecture with Fumihiko Maki at the University of Tokyo. Wendy loves to hike, throw parties and teach art in the San Francisco public schools. She loves paper and books, especially handmade paper from Japan and the ways artists use it.
Aaron Binns
Senior Software Engineer
Aaron joined the Internet Archive in January 2008 to bring
full-text search to the archives, as well as an elevated
sense of sartorial excellence to the archivists.
Previously, he has worked at various technology start-ups
in San Francisco and outside of Washington D.C. Aaron
graduated from Case Western Reserve University with a B.S
in Computer Science.
Abigail Hall
Lead, Digital Scanning Satellite
Abigail has been with the Archive since 2009. She started
out as a book scanner at North Carolina State and Duke
University Libraries, and is now a supervisor at the
Library of Congress. This position suits her well, as she
is endlessly fascinated with the language and illustrations
found in old books. Abigail enjoys people-watching, sitting
in coffee shops for extended periods of time, sewing, and
building websites on delightfully random topics.
Alyse K
Parrino Executive Recruiter
is a veteran with 20 years experience in the Staffing and
Recruiting Industry has joined Internet Archive as their
in-house IT Recruiter. She has managed and sold staffing
and recruiting services both locally and nationally.
Clients included Fortune 500 companies, as well as smaller
private and public companies. Positions ranged from
"impossible to find" individual contributors, to key
corporate officers. She is excited to bring her Human
Capital and Leadership experience to an organization that
parallels her passion for books. A third Generation San
Franciscan, she is excited to be working for a San
Francisco based non-profit. She is a former Board Member of
Goodwill Industries, San Francisco, Marin, and San Mateo.
When not working, she enjoys spending time with her
daughter, hiking with her friends and dog Stanley, reading
and listening to music.
Andy
Seronick Scanning Coordinator, Boston
Andy Seronick came to The Internet Archive after studying
and writing Journalistic poetry, craving technology and
being apart of two World Series with the Boston Red Sox.
Since 1996, Andy has made the internet a strong slice of
his life. Crowning moments include winning professional
championships in online-space- ship- computer- game;
actively contributing to the development of future
communications; and inventing this emoticon "] Andy
believes that the Internet is the most meaningful
advancement in humankind since the invention of the
printing- press. The marriage of unabashed free thoughts
and simplistic, global publishing is why Andy believes so
strongly in advancing the possibilities of the web through
working with The Archive. Ultimately, Andy plans to become
elected as President of the Unknown Universe.
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.
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.
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
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
Turn-offs : Fake people, bad breath, brussel sprouts,
traffic
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.
Bonnie Real
Project Manager, NASA Images
Since she joined the NASA Images project at the Internet
Archive in 2008, Bonnie's role in providing universal
access has been providing access to the universe. Her
previous endeavors in information include overseeing
production for an online journal at the Public Library of
Science and editing articles for the IU Knowledge Base. She
has a degree in cognitive science and an MLS from Indiana
University.
Brad Tofel
Data Archivist
Brad Tofel has been working with Internet technologies
since 1997. 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.
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'.
Calvin Yee
Collections Project Manager
A fellow traveler on planet Earth, Calvin enjoys listening
to funk, playing baseball, eating a simple meal, and riding
on Amtrak. He now calls San Francisco his home after having
lived in Los Angeles, along with stops in Atlanta and New
York City. Just grateful to be a participating human being
in this digital revolution.
Cameron Ottens
Special Projects Assistant
Cameron joined the archive in November 2012 to help out in
the admin department with various projects and start the
apprenticeship program. He has a BA in politics from SFSU
and spent some time living in a bus as a project manager on
a farm before upgrading to an apartment in rural Bulgaria
as a Peace Corps volunteer and finally returning to
California for the good life in the Golden State.
Cara Binder
AmeriCorps VISTA volunteer
Cara joined Internet Archive in December of 2008 as the
AmeriCorps VISTA working in collections and outreach. Cara
went to school at Michigan State University, earning a BA
in Journalism with a specialization in Women, Gender and
Social Justice. She was associate editor for MSU's
alternative online magazine, spent six months interning at
Utne Reader in Minneapolis, and was a bookseller since she
was old enough to be employed. Cara loves hiking and
camping, seeing live music, reading all day, and playing
with her two big dogs in her backyard.
Casey Nelson
Executive Assistant
Casey Nelson has worked at many non-profits prior to his
arrival at the Archive. He is delighted to be back in San
Francisco after a protracted stay in Seattle. He attended
Gannon University and has a B.A. in English and Philosophy.
He looks forward to the day that his favorite poet, Russell
Edson, wins the accolades he deserves and until then enjoys
reading, writing, swimming and road biking in Marin.
Chris Jones
Illinois TSP Supervisor
Chris was born and raised in Iowa City, IA. In 2001 he
earned a B.A. in French with an emphasis in business from
the University of Northern Iowa. In 2002, he earned an
Master's Degree in Library and Information Science from the
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. For four years
after that he was the assistant to the curator of special
collections at the Rare Book & Manuscript Library at
UIUC, and in January 2007 he joined the IA team. When he's
not glued to his video games, he can be found outdoors
reading, gardening, biking, hiking, or photographing is
findings as he aimlessly wanders the back roads of
Illinois.
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.
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
Dan Hitt
Engineer
Dan is a programmer in the books group.
Daniel
Bernstein Developer, Archive-It
Daniel joined the Web Group in 2005 as a contributor to
IA's Archive-It service. While creating tools to help
librarians and archivists archive and analyze vast swaths
of the Internet, he cultivates the habit of asking himself
the following question: What things, among all that can be
saved, are truly worth saving? Daniel graduated from
Columbia University with BA in History.
Edward Betts
data munger, Open Library
Edward is a software engineer with passion for web
scraping, big databases and search. He built the back end
for a video archive at television news company ITN in
London. Edward has a BS in Computer Science from the
University of East Anglia and also studied at the
University of Colorado, Boulder. .
Eric Ostlund
System Administrator and Technical Support
Eric has been programming computers since the early
eighties. He is the System Administration and Technical
Support for the Book Scanning Centers. He has lived and
written code in Minneapolis, Seattle, Boston, Geneva and
the San Francisco Bay Area.
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.
Fred Cirera
Web Operations Engineer
Born in France, Fred holds a Master in Computer Science and
Micro Electronics from the University Of Paris 8. After
several years designing and developing software for the
banking industry, his passion for the Internet led him to
create Mygale, the very first French-speaking online
community, providing free web hosting and email to all.
Mygale was later acquired by Lycos Europe. He moved to the
US to work for Sun Microsystem as an engineer and developed
system administration tools for the Sun Cluster Group.
Before joining Internet Archive in 2008, he was focused on
providing hosted anti-spam solutions and free web
utilities. At Internet Archive, Fred manages the web
group's data center and designs, maintains and develops
tools to ensure that the systems run smoothly..
George Oates
Lead, Open Library
George has worked on the web since 1996, in a variety of
roles that normally revolve around front-end design and
online community. She is entirely comfortable with
"amateur" metadata creation and hopes to explore this
within the context of Open Library. What happens when you
blend expertly crafted librarianship with the masses?
In January 2011, George was appointed as a Research
Associate with the Smithsonian Libraries.
Ginger
Bisharat Executive Assistant Books
Ginger Bisharat came to the Internet Archive through the
JobsNow program. Her background includes a stint as a
natural childbirth educator, and regular event planning at
PTA fundraising events. She spent five years at Bloomberg
News as the Western Regional Newsroom Administrator, based
in San Francisco. Her BA in Psychology is from UC Santa
Cruz, and she grew up playing in the fields of El Sobrante
in the East Bay. She lives in SF with her family of two
awesome little boys, and loves cycling, running, reading,
and being surrounded by geeks all day.
Greg
Williamson Internet Collections Engineer
joined the NASA Images project at the Archive in January
2010. Most of his previous professional life has been spent
helping business people count their money faster and more
accurately, having been among other things a Senior DBA at
DigitalGlobe, a Senior Software Engineer at TRW, and a host
of other techie jobs. He has worked in the non-profit world
before as a programmer at the Berkeley Community Memory
Project and as one of the founders and main creators of the
Shaping San Francisco history project. Some of his
ill-advised attempts at writing may be viewed both at the
ShapingSF web site and the Processed World site. He owns a
bachelor's degree in psychology from U.C. Berkeley.
Non-computer interests include hiking, cooking and sampling
the rich music in the Bay Area.
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.
Jennifer
Leebove HR
Jennifer enjoys delving into all aspects of Human
Resources. She works closely with the Archive's
administration department making sure all payroll, benefits
and other issues are resolved. Prior to working in HR,
Jennifer was a an English Language teacher in Madrid and
Italy for 10 years.
J. Mauthe
Digital Scanning Coordinator - Bay Area
As Digital Scanning Coordinator, J. is managing the daily
operations of the Archives 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
Jacqueline
Morfin System Administrative Associate
has been working with Computer hardware\break fix issues as
a Desk-side Support specialist since 2000. She has been
with Internet Archive since January 2010 as Assistant
System Administration and Desk-side Technical Support for
the Book Scanning Centers. She loves spending time with
family and friends. She enjoys volunteering at her
daughter's school, Children After School Arts and political
campaigns
Jason S.
Berland aka DJ Ju LP Site Coordinator
Born and raised in Queens, New York City, Jason has had a
love for music since he was a little boy teaching himself
how to play on his Grandmother's piano. That love for music
soon turned into a record collection that totaled over
30,000 LPs, almost all of which have been digitized. Jason
has been a DJ since the age of 14 and did parties for
recording artist Pink, People magazine, and many other
clientele from NYC to LA to SF. Jason also was in the music
business since the age of 17, working and interning for
companies like Def Jam Records, BMI, EMI Music Publishing,
and John Mellencamp's management company. Jason also
graduated from the internationally recognized Bronx High
School of Science and New York University with a BA in the
Music Business. While most of the 30,000 physical LPs have
been sold, Jason is holding on to his favorite 1,000
records to pass on to his son, Jonah Louis.
Jermaine
Standfield Maintenance
Jermaine came to the Internet Archive in 2009 under the
Jobs Now Obama stimulus project. Jermaine likes to listen
to music while working and loves to learn new things. He is
fully dedicated to the beautification of the Internet
Archive facilities.
Jim Shankland
Manager of Operations
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.
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.
Joerg Bashir
System Administrator
Joerg is a System Administrator who loves linux and complex
distributed systems.
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.
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.
Jon Hornstein Director of
NASA Images Project
Jon has been helping organizations manage and monetize
digital media for over 15 years. Most recently Jon served
as General Manager of Erickson Productions, a stock media
agency. While there he guided the company through rapid
growth to become one of the world's leading premium stock
agencies.
Previously, as VP Strategy for iXL's Digital Media
Solutions Groups, Jon managed the development of the
digital media business strategy for a wide range of
companies including Kodak, Virgin, The Golf Channel The
Financial Times, as well as many start-ups. In 2000 Jon
co-authored the white paper "COPE: A Create Once, Publish
Everywhere Strategy" which is widely considered one of the
first papers to outline how media companies can take
advantage of the advent of new mobile and broadband media
devices.
Jon received a BA from San Francisco State University
and an MA from The George Washington University School of
International Affairs.
Julie Lefevre
Digital Projects Librarian
Julie Lefevre has worked on the Internet Archive's books
digitization program since 2005, contributing to the
development of metadata retrieval and reporting tools, and
standardizing workflow in the Archive's scanning centers.
After serving as Quality Assurance Librarian and Digital
Scanning Coordinator of the Archive's northern California
scanning center, Julie is now the Archive's Digital
Projects Librarian, working on metadata and curation
issues. She has an MLIS from San Jose State University and
an MA in Liberal arts from St. John's College in Santa Fe,
NM.
Juliessa
Meranda Rivera Partner Support Associate
was born and raised in San Francisco, California and is
registered with The Navajo Nation. She studied Psychology
and Education, while working in marketing and office
management. Developing a passion for counseling urban youth
led her to a ten year career in the Education field,
teaching Art, Cooking and Recreation for private and
non-profit organizations. As the Partner Support Associate
with the Internet Archive subscription Archive-It service,
she provides the first line of contact for our partners and
facilitates on-going partner support and outreach efforts
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.
Kate Odell
Partner Specialist, Web Archiving Services
Kate joins the Internet Archive after several years
managing projects at a startup in Silicon Valley. Prior to
that she spent time teaching computer science to kids of
all ages, as well as traveling in Asia. Kate received a
B.S. from Stanford University, where she studied computer
science and how society and technology interact. She is
fascinated with how people and institutions are
transitioning into the 'digital age', and is very excited
to be working with the partners of Archive-It to help them
archive the web for future generations. In her spare time
she can be found reading good books, playing in Northern
California's beautiful outdoors, planning her next travel
adventure, and generally enjoying life.
KD Frazier
Digital Scanning Supervisor
attended the University of Redlands, where he majored in
Music, Vocal Performance. He served in the U.S. Navy as a
seabee, and performed with the Navy Band. He has also
worked as a performer (singer/actor) for Disney, and
various professional regional theatres throughout the
continental United States. KD is card carrying, dues paying
member of Actors Equity. During the day KD has worked as a
social worker, an HIV Pre and Post Test Counselor, and as a
property manager (specializing in affordable housing).
Kieleil-DeLeon "KD" Frazier Scanning Center Supervisor
Kelly Critch
Site Coordinator
Kelly has been with the Archive since 2006 and is presently
the site coordinator in Los Angeles, which includes the
Getty Research Institute TSP. Prior to working at the
Internet Archive he managed a real-time video and chat
department for an on-line retailer that was one of the
first of it's kind to use such tools on the web as a means
to sell products. He also worked for an architectural firm
that specialized in commercial spaces. He enjoys all things
motorcycles and anything motorcycle racing related.
Kris Brix
Scanning Center Coordinator
After a traditional east coast upbringing in Massachusetts,
Kris relocated to California in the '80s and eventually
made her way to UCLA where she received a Bachelor of Arts
Degree in Art History with a focus in Film Study. She will
be continuing her education in 2009 by pursuing a Master of
Library and Information Science degree with a specialty in
Digital Libraries. In addition to a decade spent working
within the UCLA Library system, she has worked for a wide
variety of employers including the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art and the American Film Institute. Kris joined
Internet Archive in 2006 and as the Los Angeles Scanning
Center Coordinator she has enjoyed working to help digitize
the many diverse library collections on the UCLA campus and
at the neighboring Getty Research Institute.
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. 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.
Kristen Schlott
Designer
Kristen is supremely interested in making Archive.org an
easier, friendlier, more useful thing for its wonderful
community of users. She graduated in 2010 from Washington
University in St. Louis with a degree in Environmental
Studies and Environmental Engineering, and has since
endeavored to apply her systems-thinking to the UCD
process. Formerly she worked in-house with nonprofit
Architecture for Humanity. She really wants a dog some day.
Lajolla
Young Digital Scanning Supervisor
As one of the original book scanners of the pilot scanning
project, he is proud to have worked with the first and #1
books team in North America, Team Toronto, and the Internet
Archive. He began as a book scanner but over time has held
many other titles and responsibilities. After spending 5
great years with Toronto, he hopes to continue to be a
positive influence for the team here in SF and to reflect
what the project stands for. Some of Lajolla's favorite
pastimes include meditation, cycling, and Jiulong
Baguazhang martial arts. Before working for the Internet
Archive, he was a certified massage therapist .
Lance
Grabmiller Officer Manager
Lance spent six years as an administrative and legal
assistant for a small law firm and several years in other
administrative service and management settings prior to
joining the Internet Archive in October 2008. Jack of all
trades, and master of only a few, he is an active
participant in the San Francisco Bay Area's creative music
community, performing in, presenting and organizing
concerts and festivals throughout California and runs his
own record label for creative electronic music.
Mario Murphy
Books Processing Engineer
Previous to the Archive, he was "Systems Manager" at Octavo
where 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.
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.
Melissa Bell
Site Coordinator
Currently, I am the Site Coordinator in Boston, digitizing
materials. I have spent the last year or so working in
several of our scanning centers in different capacities. I
also attend school part-time pursing a degree in a
science/research related field. Prior to working for the
Archive I have worked many years in the manufacturing
industry as a Supervisor, QA Inspector and computer
hardware integrator. I have also attained an EMT
certification allowing me to volunteer my services working
with and giving back to the community.
Michael Ang
Senior Software Engineer
An engineer by trade and artist by aspiration, Michael came
to the Internet Archive to further its goal of Universal
Access To All Knowledge. In addition to a degree in
Computer Engineering from the University of Waterloo in
Canada, Michael holds a Master's Degree from the
Interactive Telecommunications Program at New York
University and sports more than a few battle scars from Bay
Area and Canadian startup companies. Michael is currently
working on the Internet Archive's online BookReader, the
software that provides immediate access to the Archive's
gigantic collection of books. The open source BookReader
software is now used by the Library of Congress and other
libraries. In his copious spare time he takes gigapixel
panoramas, surfs and creates technological artworks
designed to enhance the human experience.
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.
Michael Magin Web Crawl Engineer
Michael joined the Internet Archive web group in May 2006.
Before that he did Linux software engineering at Sun
Microsystems. He has a BS in Computer Science from
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Michael likes
to cook, lift weights, write, ride motorcycles, and is
learning to knit. He owns his own oscilloscope.
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
Paul Forrest
Hickman Office Manager
Paul graduated from Oberlin College with a potentially
useless liberal arts degree. Now, Paul lives in the Bay
Area, skipping winters for a while and biking a lot!
Hopefully, someday, Paul will be a piano tuner. Now, Paul
reads a lot, cooks and bakes. And then eats it.
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.
Paul Nguyen
Process Manager
Paul Nguyen has been with the Archive since 2005. He has
built and coordinated large-scale digitization operations
in Boston and San Francisco. In his current role as Process
Manager, he is responsible for for guiding new initiatives
through the project cycle as well as optimizing and
standardizing existing processes. He has a BS in Business
Management from San Francisco State University.
Paul Ruben
Books Engineer
Paul is a veteran of several free software projects, a
former member of the L5 Society, and a lifelong space
cadet. These days he works mostly on the Open Library
search infrastructure. His other interests include math,
cryptography, security, advanced programming languages, and
of course beer and sushi.
Raul
Rodriguez HR Assistant
I'm originally from El Salvador and I moved to San
Francisco on 1993, to the Mission District. I have my AA'S
degree of Business Administration (with emphasis in
Accounting) from Heald College on 2005, and I am currently
studying at Devry University, taking my BS in Technical
Management (with emphasis on Human Resources. I am also
building a company of Wicker Furniture, because business is
my passion, and this will be for my little one Victor, who
I love with all my life.
Peter
Brantley Director of Bookserver
He is the co-founder of the Open Book Alliance, an
organization dedicated to ensuring an open market in
digital book access. He contributes regularly to several
blogs on libraries and publishing and speaks widely on
transformations in media and information access. He serves
on the board of the International Digital Publishing Forum,
the standards setting body for digital books. Peter has
significant experience with academic research libraries and
digital library development programs, and was previously
the Executive Director of the Digital Library Federation, a
not for profit membership organization of research and
national libraries.
Renata Ewing
Partner Specialist, Archive-It
Renata has worked on the Web since 1995 when she wrote
reviews of web sites for Magellan's search directory. She
was one of the first employees at Ask Jeeves where she
helped create and manage Ask Jeeves for Kids. In 2004, she
returned to graduate school to study the web while becoming
an accredited librarian at the School of Information at the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. During graduate school
she was a summer intern in Yahoo's editorial department.
She also has MA in creative writing from San Francisco
State. Her first book of poems was recently published.
Reno Villarico
Facilities Supervisor
has been with the archive for nine months. He started out
as a scanner and one month later, June brought him over to
300 Funston to help with the restoring of the building.
Reno was promoted to Facilities Manager and thanks to June,
is very happy with his title. He wants to continue to do
the best he can for the Archive and learn as much as
possible about the company. He is fairly new to computer.
His background is in Loss Prevention where he was an Agent
for 15 years and a Manager for 3 years, so he is very
Security minded about things . Reno hopes to retire at the
Archive and prosper with all of you.
Ronnie Peoples
Site Coordinator
Ronnie Peoples heads the Scanning Center at the Library of
Congress. His background is Records Management, he has over
30 years working in the area of Micrographics,
lithographics, Reprographics and Digital imaging and over
25 years in managing and training staff in all area of
Government and Law firms. His passion is restoration of
antique cars and attending car shows. He spends a lot of
time mentoring youth in his neighborhood, and this is his
way of giving back.
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.
Sabine
Abrahms-Reynaud Community Outreach
Specialist
Originally from Germany, Sabine came to San Francisco via
Costa Rica and has been enjoying the City by the Bay ever
since. A Geographer by trade (Georg-August Universitaet,
Goettingen and San Francisco State alum), she has worked
for local non-profits for the past 11 years, as Volunteer
Program Manager, GIS Project Manager and Office Manager. In
her role as Outreach Specialist for the Archive-It
subscription service she is providing extra attention to
existing partners, as well as reaching out to potential
partners.
Samantha
O'Connell NASA Images Manager
Samantha loves information, especially when it's free! As
manager of the NASA group at Internet Archive, she finds
the work and the media both fun and educational. Her degree
in Interdisciplinary Art and her current studies in
Information Technology equip her well for the work.
Previously, Samantha taught computer literacy throughout
the Bay Area via a technically equipped bus that allowed
her to travel to numerous populations that would not
otherwise have access to computers. Her educational
outreach programs were directed primarily for inner-city
children, new citizens, and the elderly. She found the work
incredibly rewarding and loved in particular the
opportunity to meet so many lovely people. Samantha
currently lives with her wife and son in San Francisco and
she looks forward to a time in the near future when it is
again legal to marry the one you love.
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.
Stacey
Seronick Scanning Coordinator, Library of
Congress
Stacey brings a passion for aesthetics to the Archive; her
attention to detail and love of repetitious things serves
her well here. Her personal background involves formal
training as a visual artist and writer and her professional
background includes web, graphic, packaging, and industrial
design, as well as managing an independent record label for
several years. Stacey is fluent in English, BASIC, and
LOGO.
Steve (siznax)
Software Engineer
Steve is helping to write software for the petabox, the
books group, and the web group. He learned to program from
his friends that make software for spacecraft. He's
interested in not driving a car or eating animals, but
hopes to play a gig at the first sushi restaurant on a
near-earth asteroid.
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.
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.
Travis Wellman
Crawl Engineer
RIT alum, AI dabbler, HCI trend watcher. Existentialist
optimistic agnostic realist. Functional programming and
decentralization advocate. Likes big words in short
sentences. Has the Java API tattooed on V1 to avoid having
to open a new browser window. Has been known to wear a fake
mustache some Fridays.
Venus I Jones
Digital Scanning Supervisor 2nd Shift at S.F.P.
was born and raised in San Francisco. She came to the
Archive in Sept 2009 starting at 450 Mission St and
transferred to the new building, where we staffed 19
afternoon FTEs. She studied at S.F. State University with
interests in Business Management. Most of her supervisor
and management skills were acquired in the Newspaper
business, 22 years of a 29 year career. She loves the
outdoors, kids (1 son), people and animals. She is proud to
be at the Archive.
Yolanda King
User Support
Previous to the Archive, Yolanda has held positions such as
Administrative Assistant/Executive Assistant for companies
such as TRI Commercial and Merrill Lynch. Her passion for
technology came from working at CMP Media for eight years
where she worked on several trade shows and conferences
like Autodesk, PCB, 3D, Embedded Systems, among several
others. Yolanda has always been fascinated with the wonders
and thought-process when it comes to technology. She enjoys
helping others better understand the mind of an engineer on
the "HOW TO" when dealing with users on the Archive.
Outside of work, she enjoys family time with her son Dasan
in addition to writing her book and getting her own website
started soon.
Zahara Docena
Software Engineer Intern
Zahara Docena worked at the archive as a summer intern in
2010. She came to the archive as a double major in Computer
Science and Mathematics from the University of San
Francisco. During her time here, Zahara created the open
source program Sahara Analytics, which the archive
currently uses to collect data and analytics on how the
archive is being used. The tools she created for the
program are easy to use and they make parsing large log
files simple. Zahara plans to go on to graduate school to
pursue a Masters in Computer Science.