Or at least, a webpage he wrote. He also has a blog.

Passive communication not enough? Introduce yourself here.

Wyatt is a university student and wantrepreneur who thinks, reads, writes, and talks a lot, when he's not being uncomfortably quiet. He's the type of person who uses vim in screen over ssh on linux, but he loves talking to pretty much all computer people, regardless of their personal dogma or level of expertise. He likes ruby a lot as a programming language, and C, and Python, and javascript, and he doesn't really hate the rest. He sure could stand to know more about functional programming though - he's a slacker when it comes to "mathematical rigour", which is a damn shame. At least he knows his tools and methods aren't perfect: a smart friend of his said that Ruby is "very scatter-shot", and is quite right.

Wyatt listens to electronic music but wishes his tastes were more visibly eclectic, so you'd think he's cool. He particularly likes finding a small group of songs and then setting them on repeat, and then he'll listen to them for over a week. It's ridiculous. He's "learning science" or something, I don't know. It's a half-hearted effort at best, but hey, at least he's pretending to try, right? That's got to count for something.

He reads really slowly. He's working on that, genuinely. He never developed the skills to read faster, primarily out of laziness and a lack of need - it probably had something to do with our school system. He's got strong opinions about it, I think. He's recently enjoyed reading Philip K. Dick's The Man in The High Tower, Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five, and Kim Stanley Robinson's The Years of Rice and Salt. He's presently reading Good Omens, a tag-team effort by Pratchett and Gaiman. Yes, it's very funny. This would be as good a time as any to remind you that you can't spell slaughter without laughter. He's looking to read other books -- thanks, he's already read Breakfast of Champions -- even non-fiction ones, like a book about Feynman or something.

This has gone on just about long enough. If you're still with me, you must have some reason to be here: additional contact information and reading material has been conveniently listed below:

If you're bored or interested in something to do, check out an aggregator-aggregator, a music-blog aggregator, the musical twitter, or hackernews. Or you could read a comic like nedroid, maybe Dinosaur Comics, Piled Higher and Deeper, an old staple like Penny Arcade or XKCD, or find something new at a webcomic aggregator. Or, check out my list of suggested reading.