User:Damian Yerrick
Appearance
user since | |
2001-09-24 | |
last updated homepage | |
Tue Feb 12 2002 | |
contributions | |
these | |
mission drive within wikipedia | |
to help explain the far-reaching influence of the alleged lack of balance in intellectual property law | |
specialties | |
writing programs and attracting nastygrams | |
school/company | |
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology | |
motto | |
You can't earn your bullshit | |
most recent major contribution | |
Cyclic redundancy check | |
wikipedia is not everything 2 | |
it's just a bit faster | |
talk to this user | |
User talk:Damian Yerrick |
Damian Yerrick (b. October 1, 1980) is originally from Fort Wayne, Indiana, and is currently studying computer science at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology (whose IPv4 address block is 137.112/16; his desktop computer sits at 137.112.129.xxx).
In addition to Wikipedia, he also contributes to Everything2, bouncing ideas back and forth between the two projects. If you want to see some of his E2 work de-biased and integrated into Wikipedia, Talk to him, making sure to mention the specific writeup.
Some of his contributions to Wikipedia
- managed to describe Everything2 neutrally
- added much information on Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act and its impact on the public domain from his E2 writeup (http://everything2.com/?node_id=738769)
- wrote mask work copyright
- made a faux pas which led to the geographical classification in Wikipedians (this may not be relevant under php-wikipedia)
- started a list of major Muslim languages
- fixed trademark usage in spam, Java programming language, and Unix and some articles that linked to those articles
- wrote initial denormalization
- gave a basic explanation of ClearType
- explained the Cyclic redundancy check, including pseudocode
- added PackBits, including a C implementation
- implemented Arithmetic geometric mean in Scheme
- added detail to Tetris, tetromino, Apple II family, Game Boy Advance, other game console articles, data compression articles (such as Huffman coding, media compression, and MP3), Cygwin, and more
- explained the Tengwar writing system
- overhauled countable
- added various tidbits to several other entries while revising them to add more active voice; see E-Prime
- and contributed too many other minor fixes to list here.
Possible future contributions: