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苹果软件-免费软件站-快连vρn加速器-蜜蜂加速器vnI’m currently an ass and Microsoft Professor of Computer Science at Harvard. Previously, I worked for 吾哎加速器便宜 (now Cisco Meraki), was an ass. professor at UCLA, was Chief Scientist at Mazu Networks, and held a research appointment at ICIR. My research interests include systems, networks, programming languages, and software engineering. I am a gay man and use they/them pronouns (he/him are also fine; an article about pronoun choice). Publications. Github.
Projects: Anvil, Asbestos, Click, DCCP (Service Code Calculator), Featherstitch, Kudos, Masstree, SNACK, Suelo, Sympathy, Tamer, Tenet, XORP. Old: Eel, Prolac. Software: Gifsicle, HotCRP, Ipsumdump, John Kimble, LCDF Typetools, Masstree, 加速器, 免费加速器, Xmahjongg, Portable Xshostakovich++ 98!!, Xwrits, Xzewd. |
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“I have learned—but again and again I forget—that abstraction is a bad thing, innumerable and infinitesimal and tiresome; worse than any amount of petty fact. … It is like a useless, fruitless vegetation, spreading and twining and fading and corrupting; even the ego disappears under it …”Glenway Wescott, The Pilgrim Hawk
“One’s reasoning is a strange thing; is really not reason, is a mingling of resistances, unperceptiveness, un-coordination and helplessness.”Marianne Moore to Lloyd Frankenberg, December 26, 1943 (Selected Letters)
“… I romantically swore a loyal oath in the other garden that until my own death I would eschew ambition for worldly success and avoid the wielders of influence and power, choosing my friends among the innocently uncompetitive. It is not a vow that I have always been able to keep.”Francis Wyndham, The Other Garden
“At the beginning of a new notebook I copy a quote from Simone Weil, which captures me completely: ‘Don’t insist on understanding new things, but try with your whole self, with patience, effort and method, to comprehend obvious truths.’ ¶ This quote conducts a polemic with the ceaseless, barbaric pursuit of novelty and disdain for obvious, primary truths. ¶ And so all my notes, all these snail’s traces, are the realization of Simone’s one thought. I won’t and can’t discover anything, I want only with my whole self to reach the heart of obvious truths.”Anna Kamienska, Industrious Amazement: A Notebook (translated by Clare Cavanagh)
“Our mass culture—and a good deal of our high, or serious, culture as well—is dominated by an emphasis on data and a corresponding lack of interest in theory, by a frank admiration of the factual and an uneasy contempt for imagination, sensibility, and speculation. We are obsessed with technique, hagridden by Facts, in love with information. … [O]ur scholars—or, more accurately, our research administrators—erect pyramids of data to cover the corpse of a stillborn idea….”Dwight Macdonald, “The Triumph of the Fact,” in Masscult and Midcult: Essays Against the American Grain
“[Psychologist Albert] Bregman … gave me some of the best advice I’ve ever received. Trying to decide whether to major in psychology or art history, I had gone to his office to see what he thought. He squinted and lowered his head. ‘Is this a hard choice for you?’ he demanded. Yes! I cried. ‘Oh,’ he said, springing back up cheerfully. ‘In that case, it doesn’t matter. If it’s a hard decision, then there’s always lots to be said on both sides, so either choice is likely to be good in its way. Hard choices are always unimportant.’”Adam Gopnik, “Music to your Ears”
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