Davey Winder

Davey Winder, previously known as "Wavey Davey" or "dwindera" but now settled as "happygeek", is a United Kingdom IT pundit who has worked as a consultant, writer and journalist. He is the 'IT Security Journalist of the Year (UK) 2010', an award he has won three times (2006, 2008, 2010).[1]

Biography

After viral encephalitis left him severely disabled, he first got a computer to use video games to improve the coordination in the remaining arm in which he had the power of movement. He then used a word processor to learn how to read and write again, with the help of his late father and numerous Janet and John kids' books. The disease had also changed his personality, devastating his marriage and social life. After experiments with Prestel, he found an early British online community, CIX, in the late 1980s, before direct connections to the internet were cheaply available outside academia, and this provided him with a new social and business life. Winder was contacted through CIX email over the internet by technological culture writer Howard Rheingold, a habitué of The Well, another early online community-based in the United States, and eventually the two met in person at Winder's home; the meeting is described in Rheingold's book, The Virtual Community. A prolific author himself, Winder has had more than 20 books published. The most recent, Being Virtual, in conjunction with the Science Museum, in London which explores the realm of virtual identity and is part auto-biographical in nature. Winder is now fully recovered and no longer needs a wheelchair.

Publications

gollark: I'm working on improving the encoding to use non-RLEd base 68 instead.
gollark: Anyway, my favourite design is no drop shadows or rounded corners or anything but plain rectangles, maybe with borders.
gollark: <@113673208296636420> Yes, I *know* it's easy to cheat.
gollark: In retrospect, it would make much more sense to handle it differently. I could edit it now, actually.
gollark: I tried to pack as much information as possible ~~without very much work~~ into the URLs, so they also support base64'd base256 encoded numbers (yes this is a mess) and (really poorly done) RLE on those.

References

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