>maddog's monastery and marina for math, music, micro-computing, micro-brewery, micro-winery, micro-distilery, and bait shop.

 

So Maddog, feel free to bring along some tequila from your micro distillery, but if you do, please make sure to toss in a few worms from the bait shop.  :-)

 

From: wlug-bounces@mail.wlug.org [mailto:wlug-bounces@mail.wlug.org] On Behalf Of Tim Keller
Sent: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 5:01 PM
To: Worcester Linux Users Group
Subject: [Wlug] Next Meeting: June 9th 2016! Speaker: Jon "Maddog" Hall!

 

Hey Gang,

 

Jon "Maddog" Hall is going to be speaking at the upcoming meeting!

 

Here's the details:

Date & Time: June 9th, 2016 @ 7pm

Location: WPI Atwater-kent Rm 232

Topic: Back from the Dead: Projects that maddog is working on, and why you should care

Abstract: Only a month after a massive heart attack maddog will be talking about some of the projects he is working on:

(1) Rebooting the Linux Professional Institute (and why you should care)

(2) Selling small computers in Brazil (and why you should care)

(3) Creating jobs for the jobless and help for the clueless (and why you should care)

 

 

Who is Jon "Maddog" Hall?

 

Jon "maddog" Hall is the Chairman of the Board of the Linux Professional Institute, and the President of Linux International.  Since 1969, Mr. Hall has been a programmer, systems designer, systems administrator, product manager, technical marketing manager, author and educator.

He currently works as an independent consultant, and is involved with bringing environmentally friendly computing to emerging marketplaces as well as working on performance and educational issues with Free and Open Source Software via the Linaro Association.  He is also closely aligned with LeMaker, a design center located in Shengen, China.

While not a founding member of LPI, maddog helped formulate some of the concepts and donated personal money to allow the first 200 tests be tested for psychometrics.

Mr. Hall has worked for such companies as Western Electric Corporation, Aetna Life and Casualty, Bell Laboratories, Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), VA Linux Systems, SGI, Futura Networks (Campus Party) and Linaro.  Mr. Hall has taught at Hartford State Technical College (HSTC), Merrimack College and Daniel Webster College.  While at HSTC his students gave him the nickname of "maddog", and he developed the skills necessary for talking to university students over pizza and beer.

Mr Hall has worked on many different operating systems (MFT, MVT, VS1, VS2, MVS, CP-67, VM/CMS, RSTS/E, RSX-11M, CP/M) but concentrated on Unix systems since 1980 and Linux systems since 1994, when he first met Linus Torvalds and correctly recognized the commercial importance of Linux and Free and Open Source Software.  Mr. Hall obtained a DEC "Alpha" system for Linus Torvalds and organized and engineering team which helped the Linux community to port Linux to the world's fastest 64-bit microcomputer.

Since 2006 Mr. Hall has been working on Project Cauā, which will large numbers of high-tech jobs allowing students who could not afford to attend university to both attend university and get real-life job experience.

Mr. Hall is the author of numerous magazine and newspaper articles, many presentations and one book, "Linux for Dummies".  He currently writes a blog for Linux Pro Magazine.

Mr. Hall has consulted with the governments of China, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia and Brasil as well as the United Nations and many local and state governments on the use of Free and Open Source Software.

Mr. Hall serves on the boards of several companies, and several non-profit organizations.  He is currently very active with the University of Sao Paulo's Centro Interdisciplinar Em Tecnologias Interativas (CITI), acting as a member of their advisory board.

Mr. Hall has traveled to over 100 countries, many more than one time, speaking on the benefits of Open Source Software having received his BS in Commerce and Engineering from Drexel University (1973), and his MSCS from RPI in Troy, New York (1977).

In his spare time maddog is working on his retirement project:

maddog's monastery and marina for math, music, micro-computing, micro-brewery, micro-winery, micro-distilery, and bait shop.