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User:Wvbailey

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Wvbailey (talk | contribs) at 20:15, 10 January 2006. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Bill Bailey has had an interest in computing machines since the mid-1980's. This evolved from an early interest in "the mind," as in "consciousness", once again his current academic/research interest. Many years ago he got an AB from Dartmouth, a B.Eng from Thayer School at Dartmouth, and an MSEE from Stanford University. Now he's an old guy (i.e >30 years of age). To give you a hint how old -- he knocks on wood a fair amount, doesn't want to put his mouth on this sort of thing -- he knows how to use a slide rule (oh my god! Speaking of wood it was a bamboo Post, and he still has it). And, he once sat in a seminar when these guys from Intel came by to show off their little 4004 4-bit processor (or was it the 8008? He seems to remember the 4004 was actually on the market. Yikes! Now that's OLD.) Mr. B. worked for a really long time (or so it seemed at the time, now it seems like just a flash) at a company that made equipment for the welding industry. There, early on, sometimes he got to do a lot of assembly-language programming. But usally he was just wire-wrapping and soldering and doing EE-stuff. And then when he got kinda old he got to spend (waste?) a lot of time working on international standards. And now he's out to pasture, building things and mulling over "consciousness". And so it goes...

Some of wvbailey's professional accomplishements:

  • He continues to breathe (usually), and he hopes to continue to do so
  • As an undergrad, while working at the Bureau of Mines, he co-authored a paper concerning stress-strain inside mining tunnels. This work was using a new-fangled concept called "finite-element analysis", on a honking control data computer that probably had ... maybe a meg of core (at the most).
  • He designed two Dartmouth Winter Carnival posters: 1969 and 1970
  • He actually has seen a Teletype printer, and actually knows how they work
  • As an undergrad he built a datalogger to hook to said Teletype
  • Then he built a digital taperecorder to hook to the datalogger
  • While at stanford he worked on ultasonic imaging hardware
  • He has a patent concerning vibrating wire instrumentation that uses phase-locked loops in an adaptive circuit. This was paid for by the Bureau of Mines.
  • He is co-patenter of some patents re plasma-arc metal cutting
  • He built a little Post-Turing machine from real stuff, and ran a couple baby busy beavers on it.
  • He wrote the "Universal instructions" for said beasty
  • He's built machine-models in C, in assembly language, and in Excel.
  • He contributed to the design of a shit-load of plasma cutting equipment, as both contributor and team leader
  • He ran for and was elected to the local school board, diligently served his sentence for three years (and came to truly understand the wisdom of that old chestnut: "No good deed goes unpunished") and actually stayed on for a fourth year during contract negotiations with the teacher's union
  • He wrote a novel called Circle Nine, which languishes in a box on a shelf
  • He designed and patented "a doll with adaptive behaviors". (If anybody wants to buy the patent, let him know.)
  • The past couple summers he's worked as field slave for his son who was doing research on anabrus simplex (katydids: Mormon crickets). He did the sound recording. Lately he's been working on a better laptop case for field use.