Julian Todd

Julian Todd is a British computer programmer and activist for freedom of information who works in Liverpool.[1]

Julian Todd
EducationCambridge University
OccupationComputer programmer
Parent(s)Janet Todd

He was inventor and co-founder of Public Whip with Francis Irving, and also the affiliated TheyWorkForYou website, a project that parses raw Hansard data to track how members vote in the UK Parliament. Initially risking prosecution for reusing the raw data under Crown copyright, they were later successful in getting permission to use it.[2] He has since extended this concept of parsing political transcripts to the General Assembly and Security Council of the United Nations to establish UNdemocracy.com in 2007.[3]

Todd is a Director of ScraperWiki.[4]

Todd also writes science fiction short stories, and is cited as a major inspiration for the Mundane science fiction movement.[5]

Publications

A machining strategy for toolmaking, A. Flutter and J. Todd doi:10.1016/S0010-4485(00)00136-6

Game credits

gollark: osmarksISA-2028™ is not squashable.
gollark: Probably not to a different ISA entirely.
gollark: Doubtful.
gollark: How, though?
gollark: How does it compare to osmarksISA-2028™?

References

  1. Julian, Todd (4 September 2006). "The UN as evidenced on the streets of Liverpool". Freesteel blog.
  2. Brook, Heather (8 June 2006). "Make it work for us, Ms Tullo". The Guardian.
  3. Grossman, Wendy (13 March 2008). "Is it possible for geeks to fix the United Nations?". The Guardian.
  4. ScraperWiki about page
  5. "Geoff Ryman: The Mundane Fantastic: Interview excerpts". Locus. January 2006. Retrieved 23 September 2007.
  • Julian Todd at World of Spectrum
  • Freesteel - blog with Martin Dunschen focused on CAM programming and computational geometry
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