Street Cred Contributors

Phil Agre (pagre@ucsd.edu) teaches in the Department of Communication at the University of California, San Diego. Patrick Barber wonders what it would sound like if all the cars stopped. He is a writer. Brent Butterworth is senior editor of Video Magazine, a semiprofessional videographer and a Chapman Stick player. Roger Ebert's film reviews appear in […]

Phil Agre (pagre@ucsd.edu) teaches in the Department of Communication at the University of California, San Diego.

Patrick Barber wonders what it would sound like if all the cars stopped. He is a writer.

Brent Butterworth is senior editor of Video Magazine, a semiprofessional videographer and a Chapman Stick player.

Roger Ebert's film reviews appear in the Microsoft Cinemania CD-ROM, which recently added a Mac version.

Simson L. Garfinkel (simsong@mit.edu) is a computer consultant and science writer.

Jim Gasperini (jimg@well.sf.ca.us), author of Hidden Agenda, is currently designing multimedia titles for several platforms, in Paris and New York.

Rishab Aiyer Ghosh (rishab@dxm.ernet.in) is a columnist, writer, and cypherpunk based in New Delhi, India.

Corey Greenberg is an Austin, Texas-based writer. His work has appeared in Rolling Stone, Spin, and Stereophile.

Peter L. Herb (plherb@aol.com) is an attorney in New York City who plays guitar and can be found most weekdays wearing a bow tie and suspenders.

Bryan Higgins plays the French horn and clavichord, writes fiction and software, and lives in Berkeley and Soda Springs, California.

Richard Kadrey (kadrey@well.sf.ca.us) is senior editor at Future Sex magazine as well as author of the novels Metrophage and the forthcoming Kamikaze L'Amour.

Bob Kelly, proud of his New Jersey heritage, is an editor at big Whoop! magazine in San Francisco.

Steven Levy (steven@echoync.com) is a Fellow at the Freedom Forum Media Studies Center. He is author of Hackers, Insanely Great, and other books.

Nick Philip (nphilip@netcom.com) is CG artist at SFX lab in San Francisco. He is currently working on an ambient multimedia project in Tokyo called The New Elements.

Alan Rapp is the guy you think you've met before that you actually haven't.

Jef Raskin (raskinjef@aol.com) created the Macintosh computer project and plays the contrabass recorder in F.

Bob Rossney writes the Online column for the San Francisco Chronicle and is still looking for a reason to buy a CD-ROM player.

James Rozzi is a freelance writer, woodwind musician, and teacher in the Orlando, Florida, area.

Dr. Rhythm (Alastair Johnston) is a letterpress printer and a teacher of graphic design who broadcasts over the San Francisco radiowaves.

Rich Santalesa is the former editor in chief of Windows User magazine. Currently he's the editor of PDA & Wireless World.

Paul Semel (beerhound@aol.com) has yet to find a great book store in Los Angeles.

James F. Stanek writes.

Steve G. Steinberg (tek@well.sf.ca.us) is a computer science student and the editor of Intertek, a technology and society journal.

Scott Taves (staves@aol.com) is a music journalist and director of special projects at Reactor, an interactive software developer/publisher in Chicago. He's partial to machine music.

Howard Wen was editor of Thursday Magazine, a tabloid covering the college music scene of Denton, Texas. It's an experience he's still recovering from.

Mary Elizabeth Williams (marybeth@well.com) is a columnist for the new magazine Spec. She is hopelessly mired in the '80s.

STREET CRED
Sega's Tokyo JoypolisCD Rights

CD-ROMs That Suck

Absolutely Fabulous

Pop Goes the Millennium

Keep Out

Virtual Loneliness

Audio Paradiso

The Unix-Haters Handbook

Trip on Tape

Video Dub Buddy

Crash Test Camera

Skeleton Key

Expert Backgammon

Build a World in a Weekend

The Electric Geisha

Brave New Warrior

Who Owns Information?

DoubleTake 100

Total Eclipse

Street Cred Contributors