Ivan Berger, technical editor of Audio Magazine, has been writing about audio and other aspects of electronics since 1962. In 1978, as an Altair owner, he was one of the first with a home computer.
Stewart Brand is a co-founder of The Well, the Hackers' Conference, and the Global Business Network. His books, The Media Lab (1987) and How Buildings Learn (1994), are still in print.
Andrew Cockwell is in his honors year at Queen's University in Canada where he can usually be found working too hard and sleeping too little, worshipping the god that is Gunner.
Jane Dark is the editor, publisher, and sole contributor to sugar high!, the lowbrower-than-thou bible of pop music.
Allison Diamond (allison@well.com) has contributed to Detour, Plazm, and BAM. She resists temptation by staying in site.
Kimi Eastham is a Maryland-based freelance writer who contributes to Wired, Tokyo Journal, Mangajin, and other publications in the US and Japan.
James Flint (flint@wired.com.uk) sits on a swivel chair in the center of the Wired UK office. This gives him a perfect 360-degree view and allows him to erect advanced paranoid structures at will.
Karen Eng (kfeng@igc.apc.org) lives in Berkeley, California, with Esm� the toad and Sebastian the snake. She has been spotted in the Wired offices posing as a freelance copy editor.
Lynn Ginsburg (ginsburg@csd.net) has credits all over the place, including soap operas, off-Broadway plays, multimedia reviews, and techno-geek personality profiles. She lives in Boulder, Colorado.
Eddie Glaser has been a full-time kid since September of 1983. He's been using computers since he was 6 months old, when he discovered the Print command on his father's keyboard.
Phil Hall is an okapi at the Bronx Zoo.
Chris Hudak (gametheory@aol.com) travels, plays computer games, shoots pool, drinks rather too much, and somehow gets paid for it.
Rita M. Johnson (zymyatin@earthlink.net) is a Missouri native presently residing in Los Angeles. Her writing has appeared in LA Weekly, Sky, Dazed & Confused, and Request.
Marc Laidlaw is the author of Dad's Nuke, The 37th Mandala, and the forthcoming The Third Force: A Novel of Gadget.
Jon Lebkowsky (jonl@well.com) is former CEO of FringeWare Inc. and current moderator of the Electronic Frontiers Forum at HotWired. He lives in Austin, Texas.
Mitch Myers (comeback@mcs.com) is a psychologist and freelance writer. He lives in Chicago and Manhattan and spends a lot of time on the phone.
Chris Nickson (73633.1471@compuserve.com) lives in Seattle. However, as he doesn't drink coffee, he may be asked to leave soon.
Jennie Ruggles (jeneric@sirius.com) has written about music for the last few years. She agrees with David Byrne, who said that "writing about music is like dancing about architecture."
James Sullivan (onion65@aol.com) is a freelance advocate of Yogi Berra's dictum, "you can observe a lot by watching."
Brad Wieners (braddog@wiredmag.com), an editor at HardWired, also writes for Details and TimeOut Net, clowns around in Salon's "Media Circus," and mouths off at Suck.
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