I was born on Friday, September 12, 1975 in Chippewa Falls, WI. I was \\ 8: one of the last babies to be born in that hospital before it was converted \\ 9: into an apartment building...
I have always been thrilled by the thought of how much power lies in \\ 13: the hands of computer programmers. The idea that I can make the computer \\ 14: do nearly anything that I want it to do, by writing programs, has always \\ 15: excited me.
I remember a day long ago (I was 12) when I thought something along \\ 17: the lines of "I'm going to remember this day a long time from now." \\ 18: I had just talked to one of my parents' friends about programming and \\ 19: had gotten all fired up about it. I had known that I was going to "go \\ 20: into computers" when I grew up, but I wasn't sure what I was going \\ 21: to do with them.
My parents had gotten our Apple //e about two years before (I was 10 \\ 23: or so) and I had read the manuals and written a few simple programs \\ 24: (I think my first program was one that printed my name on the screen \\ 25: an infinite number of times), but I hadn't really been sure if programming \\ 26: was something that I could do for a living.
However, all doubts left my mind that day. I went into the computer \\ 28: room of our house where the Apple //e sat on its computer desk, in all \\ 29: of its glorious wonder, and pulled out the manuals and started reading \\ 30: them again. I think that I wrote a program called "ICEBREAKER" \\ 31: sometime not too long after that day. \\ 32:
ICEBREAKER actually had nothing to do with starting up conversation \\ 33: at a get-together where no one knows anyone else... At the time I didn't \\ 34: know that definition of the word. I was metaphorically referring to \\ 35: breaking through ice. The program was sort of a game which requires \\ 36: that the player break codes (I can't remember what type of codes, but \\ 37: they couldn't have been all that complex) in order to get into someplace. \\ 38: As I recall, there really wasn't an ending. I think that it just said \\ 39: that you had broken through... Some day I'm going to have to get the \\ 40: code for ICEBREAKER and see what I wrote (it's hopefully still intact \\ 41: on a 5.25" floppy sitting in one of the disk boxes next to the \\ 42: Apple //e at my parents' home). When I get around to getting the code \\ 43: (next time I go home) I'll post it here for all to see. Wow... I'm already \\ 44: getting nostalgic.
In 1996 I wrote the [winning essay|BuhlerMemorialScholarship] for the Buhler Memorial Scholarship ($1000). It doesn't mention \\ 47: the day when I thought about how I was going to remember this day a \\ 48: long time from then (I didn't remember that day until after I had written \\ 49: the essay), but it does cover many other important memories and feelings \\ 50: that had to do with how and why I became a Computer Scientist.