Thomas Bass is the author of The Eudaemonic Pie and Reinventing the Future. His next book, Vietnamerica, will be published in the spring.
Ivan Berger (72040.15@compuserve.com), technical editor of Audio Magazine, has been writing about audio and other aspects of electronics since 1962. As an Altair owner in 1976, he was one of the first with a home computer.
Amy Bruckman (asb@purple-crayon.media.mit.edu) is a graduate student at the MIT Media Lab, where she does research on virtual communities and education.
Ron Dulin (ronkarate@aol.com) is a Libra with Capricorn rising. He writes about computer software for numerous publications.
Rupert Goodwins (rupertg@cix.compulink.co.uk) worked as an electronic designer and network software writer and is now technical editor of PC Magazine. He's been online for 12 years, but promises to log off soon.
Glen Helfand writes about art, culture, and technology for various publications including New Media, The Advocate, LA Weekly, the San Francisco Examiner, and Some Weird Sin.
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 (bryan@well.com) plays the French horn and clavichord, writes fiction and software, and lives in both Berkeley and Soda Springs, California.
Andrew Jones is a freelance music writer living in Montreal. He is a senior book editor at Reader's Digest and is the author of Plunderphonics, Pataphysics, and Pop Mechanics.
Todd Krieger (tkrieg@sirius.com) is a reluctant nomad in search of the perfect chili dog.
Andrew Lentz is a freelance writer living in Los Angeles. He toils at night on his screenplay while his terrier, Skip, is curled up at his feet fast asleep.
Elizabeth Lewis (lizabeth@well.com) writes about life online. She remembers when Xmodem was really cool.
Chris Nickson (73633.1471@compuserve.com) was born in England and now lives in Seattle. Please have pity on him.
Howard Rheingold (hlr@well.com) is the author of Virtual Reality and Virtual Community.
James Rozzi (rozzij@mail.firn.edu) is a freelance writer, woodwind musician, and teacher in the Orlando, Florida, area.
Rudy Rucker (rucker@jupiter.sjsu.edu) is a mathematician and a writer. He currently teaches in the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at San Jose State University. He has published 18 books, including the recent Infinity and the Mind, Live Robots (reissues of two cyberpunk novels), and The Hacker and the Ants, a novel about artificial life.
Paul Semel (beerhound@aol.com) edits reviews for huH and writes them for Bikini, Wired, Ray Gun, Sound Views, and HotWired.
Dan Sicko (pp002580@interramp.com) writes about and listens to techno and hip hop when he's not in the do-jang.
Dean Suzuki teaches music history at San Francisco State University, with an emphasis on 20th-century music and rock history. A radio programmer for KPFA in Berkeley, California, he also hosts a show devoted to experimental music.
Rob Swigart, a research affiliate at the Institute for the Future, is the author of Portal, an interactive novel from Activision. He plans to move to the 19th century sometime soon.
Scott Taves (staves@interaccess.com) is the US manager of B&W Music and The Blue Room record labels and author of Pocket Tour of Games on the Internet.
Norman Weinstein is a poet and music critic whose most recent book is A Night in Tunisia: Imaginings of Africa in Jazz.
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