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  Senior Editor, Computerworld.
 I’ve been a reporter at Computerworld for 10 years and have covered eclectic range of subjects, include the Microsoft antitrust trial; Y2K, or the greatest disaster that never occurred, have traveled to Guam to report on how deep you have to dig through coral to ground electrical systems, and was on the scene when ICANN expanded the domain name system. Today, my reporting focuses on such things as supercomputers, grid, virtualization, high-end servers, offshore outsourcing and whatever else that seems interesting in our endlessly interesting technology world. In an earlier life, I worked as a reporter writing about mayors’ who wrote city checks to themselves and fires that rousted me up at 3 a.m., as well as editorial writer, and author of a book about a city that was an industrial age technology hub, New Britain, Conn. In my spare time, I run a dcblogs.com, a blog about all the blogs in the wonderful city that this conference is also being hosted in, which is also my home.

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