I was born on Friday, September 12, 1975 in Chippewa Falls, WI. I was \\ one of the last babies to be born in that hospital before it was converted \\ into an apartment building...
I have always been thrilled by the thought of how much power lies in \\ the hands of computer programmers. The idea that I can make the computer \\ do nearly anything that I want it to do, by writing programs, has always \\ excited me.
I remember a day long ago (I was 12) when I thought something along \\ the lines of "I'm going to remember this day a long time from now." \\ I had just talked to one of my parents' friends about programming and \\ had gotten all fired up about it. I had known that I was going to "go \\ into computers" when I grew up, but I wasn't sure what I was going \\ to do with them.
My parents had gotten our Apple //e about two years before (I was 10 \\ or so) and I had read the manuals and written a few simple programs \\ (I think my first program was one that printed my name on the screen \\ an infinite number of times), but I hadn't really been sure if programming \\ was something that I could do for a living.
However, all doubts left my mind that day. I went into the computer \\ room of our house where the Apple //e sat on its computer desk, in all \\ of its glorious wonder, and pulled out the manuals and started reading \\ them again. I think that I wrote a program called "ICEBREAKER" \\ sometime not too long after that day. \\
ICEBREAKER actually had nothing to do with starting up conversation \\ at a get-together where no one knows anyone else... At the time I didn't \\ know that definition of the word. I was metaphorically referring to \\ breaking through ice. The program was sort of a game which requires \\ that the player break codes (I can't remember what type of codes, but \\ they couldn't have been all that complex) in order to get into someplace. \\ As I recall, there really wasn't an ending. I think that it just said \\ that you had broken through... Some day I'm going to have to get the \\ code for ICEBREAKER and see what I wrote (it's hopefully still intact \\ on a 5.25" floppy sitting in one of the disk boxes next to the \\ Apple //e at my parents' home). When I get around to getting the code \\ (next time I go home) I'll post it here for all to see. Wow... I'm already \\ getting nostalgic.
In 1996 I wrote the [winning essay|BuhlerMemorialScholarship] for the Buhler Memorial Scholarship ($1000). It doesn't mention \\ the day when I thought about how I was going to remember this day a \\ long time from then (I didn't remember that day until after I had written \\ the essay), but it does cover many other important memories and feelings \\ that had to do with how and why I became a Computer Scientist.