Chris Pirillo

Christopher Joseph Pirillo (born July 26, 1973) is the founder and CEO of LockerGnome, Inc., a network of blogs, web forums, mailing lists, and online communities. He spent two years hosting the TechTV television program Call for Help, where he also hosted the first annual Call-for-Help-a-Thon. He now hosts videos on several Internet sites, including CNN, YouTube, Ustream, CBC.ca and his own website.[5]

Chris Pirillo
Pirillo speaking at Gnomedex in 2007
Born (1973-07-26) July 26, 1973
Alma materUniversity of Northern Iowa
OccupationYouTube partner, magazine columnist, tech expert for CNN,[1] book author, conference organizer, public speaker, owner of a blogging network and social community, provider of video content, vlogger
Years active1996–present
Spouse(s)
  • Gretchen Hundling (1998-2004)
  • Ponzi Black (2006–2009)[2]
  • Diana Morales (2012–present)[3]
ChildrenJedi Pirillo
(born September 14, 2014)[4]
Websitechris.pirillo.com

Early life and education

Pirillo was born on July 26, 1973 in Des Moines, Iowa to Judy and Joe Pirillo. He has two younger brothers, Adam and Benjamin. He studied at the University of Northern Iowa, where he majored in English education, eventually graduating with an English degree. For a short time, he was a 7th grade English teacher at Coke R. Stevenson Middle School in San Antonio, Texas.

Ever since Pirillo was introduced to technology as a child he has been fascinated with the evolution and different aspects of computing. He frequently records videos on YouTube about various tech-based and geek-related topics.

Career

Pirillo ran a 24/7 live video feed from his home office via Ustream until April 23, 2013.[6] His streams, now broadcast live on YouTube, focus on software, hardware, news, reviews, computers, iOS applications, operating systems, gaming, and other technology-related topics and events.

LockerGnome was the first website that Pirillo registered back in October 1996. However, he states that only the real beginning of LockerGnome is now, since the community has grown rapidly since 1996. Pirillo runs several online communities. His LockerGnome blogging network has over 100,000 members. Geeks, his Ning-based social network, has over 24,000 users.[7] LockerGnome began as a technology mailing list in 1996, offering tips and tricks for operating systems and applications, software suggestions (with an emphasis on public domain and shareware software), and web site recommendations.[8] Several mailing lists are now provided, offering technology advice and tips[9] and other content syndicated from LockerGnome's blogs for IT Professionals.[10] A web forum for help with and discussions about technology was run from 2002 to 2015.[11]

Pirillo's advocacy of new technology went as far as the creation, along with Jake Ludington, of a BitTorrent server at vistatorrent.com "to help Microsoft get Windows Vista Beta 2 in users' hands" in 2006.[12] According to Information Week, Microsoft had "reported problems in delivering Beta 2 electronically ... recommending on its own Web site that users order the DVD rather than download the 3.5-4.4GB file".[12] Microsoft sent a cease and desist e-mail, and the pair complied.[12]

In 2001, Pirillo launched Gnomedex, a yearly conference covering all aspects of art, science, social media, blogs, and new and emerging technologies and concepts, such as Web 2.0. Gnomedex was held originally in Iowa, but moved to Seattle as of Gnomedex 5. Gnomedex 10 was considered to be the last major conference, which was held from August 19 to 21 of 2010, but in November 2011 it was decided that it would be rebooted for one more year. It was held in conjunction with the Seattle Interactive Conference. Pirillo then went on to announce that Gnomedex 10 would be the last major conference he would host.

In January 2010, he began hosting "Help Desk with Chris Pirillo", a weekly live video call-in show on Microsoft's Channel 9 web site.[13] Since early 2011, Pirillo has been one of the featured "CoolHotNot Tech Xperts", along with John C. Dvorak, Jim Louderback, Dave Graveline, Robin Raskin, Dave Whittle, Christian Burhus, Steve Bass, and Cheryl Currid. At CoolHotNot's web site, he shares his "Loved List" of favorite consumer tech products, along with a "Wanted List" and a "Letdown List".[14]

Pirillo in 2008

In 2012, Pirillo started a subscription-based service called Gnomies that offered advice to upcoming entrepreneurs who wanted an insight on how to get an idea or company launched professionally online. The service also offers extra perks such as a private Minecraft and TeamSpeak server. As of 2013, Gnomies had 1000+ members.

Another project is the "Pirillo Vlogs", started in April 2012, that both Diana and himself upload daily to the LockerGnome YouTube channel. These daily ten-minute vlogs are made to provide subscribers with a glimpse into his personal life and social connections. Starting in August 2013, Chris also added a new segment called "Pirillo Picks" to his line-up, a weekly look into geeky products that he finds or is given, furthering "Geek Culture".

In 2013, Pirillo staged VloggerFair, a meetup event for YouTube's vlogging community in Seattle. The fair was an attempt to bring vloggers and the vlogging community together. Among the event's sponsors were YouTube and Intel, and approximately 1300 people attended the event. Pirillo both hosted and vlogged at the fair. Pirillo announced plans for a second VloggerFair in 2014.

Pirillo is the author of several books, including Poor Richard's E-mail Publishing, Online! The Book with John C. Dvorak and Wendy Taylor, and several ebooks which can be purchased at GnomeTomes.[15][16]

As of 2014, Pirillo has over 340,000 subscribers on his YouTube channel,[17] and total video views of over 179,000,000. He has over 149,000 followers on Facebook and over 133,000 Twitter followers. He also launched a new YouTube channel in early 2014 called LockerGnome's Geek Lifestyles, which is going to be based on technology and geeky content only. This channel will not feature the Pirillo vlogs.

In March, 2015, Pirillo announced he was resuming Gnomedex, but providing more of a fair or festival experience than as a single-track conference.[18]

In March, 2019, Pirillo wrote on Twitter that he had joined Intel as the Chief Community Advocate for their graphics division.[19]

Personal life

Pirillo currently lives in Issaquah, Washington,[20] with his wife and child.

gollark: ```Flags: fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr p ge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr ss e sse2 ss ht tm pbe syscall nx pdpe1gb rdtscp lm c onstant_tsc art arch_perfmon pebs bts rep_good nop l xtopology nonstop_tsc cpuid aperfmperf tsc_known _freq pni pclmulqdq dtes64 monitor ds_cpl vmx est tm2 ssse3 sdbg fma cx16 xtpr pdcm pcid sse4_1 sse4 _2 x2apic movbe popcnt tsc_deadline_timer aes xsav e avx f16c rdrand lahf_lm abm 3dnowprefetch cpuid_ fault epb invpcid_single pti ssbd ibrs ibpb stibp tpr_shadow vnmi flexpriority ept vpid ept_ad fsgsb ase tsc_adjust bmi1 avx2 smep bmi2 erms invpcid mp x rdseed adx smap clflushopt intel_pt xsaveopt xsa vec xgetbv1 xsaves dtherm ida arat pln pts hwp hwp _notify hwp_act_window hwp_epp md_clear flush_l1d```
gollark: Architecture: x86_64CPU op-mode(s): 32-bit, 64-bitByte Order: Little EndianAddress sizes: 39 bits physical, 48 bits virtualCPU(s): 4On-line CPU(s) list: 0-3Thread(s) per core: 2Core(s) per socket: 2Socket(s): 1NUMA node(s): 1Vendor ID: GenuineIntelCPU family: 6Model: 142Model name: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-7200U CPU @ 2.50GHzStepping: 9CPU MHz: 861.413CPU max MHz: 3100.0000CPU min MHz: 400.0000BogoMIPS: 5426.00Virtualization: VT-xL1d cache: 64 KiBL1i cache: 64 KiBL2 cache: 512 KiBL3 cache: 3 MiBNUMA node0 CPU(s): 0-3Vulnerability L1tf: Mitigation; PTE Inversion; VMX conditional cache f lushes, SMT vulnerableVulnerability Mds: Mitigation; Clear CPU buffers; SMT vulnerableVulnerability Meltdown: Mitigation; PTIVulnerability Spec store bypass: Mitigation; Speculative Store Bypass disabled via prctl and seccompVulnerability Spectre v1: Mitigation; __user pointer sanitizationVulnerability Spectre v2: Mitigation; Full generic retpoline, IBRS_FW, STIBP conditional, RSB filling
gollark: This is highly tetrahedral.
gollark: This is one of the least reliable servers I have ever potatOSed on.
gollark: ...

References

  1. Chris Pirillo Archive. CNN.com. Retrieved 2010-10-15.
  2. "Chris & Ponzi's Wedding". Laughingsquid.com. 2006-12-10. Retrieved 2013-11-20.
  3. http://craigduffy.blogspot.co.uk/2012/03/congratulations-to-chris-pirillo-diana.html
  4. http://blogs.seattletimes.com/monica-guzman/2014/09/27/from-geek-to-geek-dad-how-blogger-chris-pirillo-is-bringing-up-jedi/
  5. Rich Analytics for Chris Pirillo. TubeMogul.com
  6. The live feed will be down. twitter.com
  7. Geeks - Reviews, News, and How To! Archived 2013-06-10 at the Wayback Machine. GeekWith.com. Retrieved on 2013-05-25.
  8. "About" lockergnome.com
  9. "Advice and Tips". lockergnome.com
  10. "IT Professionals feed". lockergnome.com
  11. "Lockergnome Help Forum Closure". lockergnome.com
  12. Gregg, Keizer (June 15, 2006). "Microsoft Shuts Off Vista Torrent". Information Week. Retrieved September 17, 2011.
  13. "Help Desk with Chris Pirillo on Channel 9 Live (Pilot Episode)". Channel 9. MSDN.
  14. "CoolHotNot Tech Xperts Team". Archived from the original on 2011-09-02. Retrieved 2011-09-01.
  15. "Poor Richard's E-mail Publishing" Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine. isbndb.com
  16. "Online! The Book" Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine. isbndb.com
  17. Chris Pirillo's channel on YouTube
  18. "Chris Pirillo is bringing Gnomedex back in Seattle — but don't call it a conference". GeekWire. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  19. "Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  20. "How's Vista? Analysts Say Fine; Users Annoyed". Park City Daily News. Bowling Green, KY. Associated Press. July 15, 2007. Retrieved January 1, 2011.
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