Virginia Hetrick -
I use OS/2 for a number of reasons:
-
First,
I can go for days, weeks, and months without having to reboot which
saves lots of time. Second, one of the things that bugs me is the
need
to learn different tools on different platforms because certain vendors
don't provide the tools I need on various platforms. A number of the
things I need on a day-to-day basis are available in OS/2 as well as
other platforms I need to use. Third, I can use my
favorite text editor, KEDIT, for which I have a gigantic set of macros
that run in DOS, Windows, and OS/2 as well as UNIX (TM) and in XEDIT on
CMS. I especially like the ability to look at practically anything to
find what I'm looking for in hex or alphameric strings.
Fourth, I especially like not having to deal with a split address
space when I'm writing programs that tend to have rather gigantic
address spaces.
- I first used OS/2 in 1988 on an IBM AT-GX, then on
a PS/2-50.
- I first used OS/2 because it was there <*_*> Seriously,
at the time, it was the first opportunity I had to do some serious REXX
programming without being involved with a mainframe or with the limited
address space of DOS.
- My favorite soda is without sugar or caffiene.
According to the nurses at the City of Hope, my most favorite flavors
are Diet Mandarin Orange Slice and Diet Sprite. From my pre-diabetic
days, I still have an affinity for Cokes which I satisfy with
Caffiene-free Diet Coke.
- The first computer I worked on was a CDC-6400 at the University of
Washington. The first one I ever actually touched was an IBM 1130 at
the University of Washington. The first one I personally owned was an
IBM PC Portable (that's the suitcase-sized job that weighs 20+ pounds
and is still calculating fractal images to this day).
- My most favorite and most-used OS/2 application is KEDIT from the
Mansfield Software Group.
- What do I do for a living? For the last nine years, I've been at
UCLA. First, I managed the Supercomputing Services Group, then I moved
to
The Institute of Archæology. My principal interests in computing are
technology futures and multimedia. My techical skills are fairly
broadbased, ranging from ATM through TCP/IP to Novell in networking,
from Fortran to most web language tools in languages, from Paradox
through DB/2 to Jasmine
in databases, and from drawing programs to medical and satellite image
processing in graphics, and practically anything dealing with multimedia
objects.
Biography
Virginia left one Washington (State) where she grew up for another
Washington (D.C.) when she went to university. While she was an
undergraduate, she worked at the Library of Congress and, after
graduation, moved over to work at her Senator's office while she was
completing her MA. She moved back to the first Washington to take a
Ph.D at the University of Washington before moving to the University of
Florida where she was on the faculty for ten years. She moved to the
computing center at UF to head a joint study project with IBM on digital
image processing of satellite imagery. After three years on that
project, she became the visualization and numerically intensive
computing coordinator. Nine years ago, UCLA made her an offer she
couldn't refuse and she moved to Los Angeles to manage UCLA's
Supercomputing Services Group.
Dr. Virginia R. Hetrick has designed more than 60 Web sites since 1992,
among them first Web site for The Institute of Archaeology at UCLA
(http://www.ioa.ucla.edu) and a site for high-dose chemotherapy patients
named You Are Not Alone (http://www.yana.org). She has been a
Technologist and Scientific Computing Manager at The Institute of
Archaeology at UCLA, Manager of the Supercomputing Services Group at
UCLA. Before coming to UCLA, she worked at the University of Florida's
NorthEast Regional Data Center following ten years on the faculty at UF.
She received her Ph.D. from the University of Washington. Outside of
work, she has been active in SHARE Inc. and served on its Board of
Directors as Director of Volunteer Resources. She's also a member of
ACM-Siggraph, POSSI, and, of course, SCOUG. Over the past six years,
she has developed a number of practical approaches to the organization
and design of Web sites and presented more than 100 talks on issues
related to these topics.
Her own
sites are:
Virginia, Women's Health
Volunteer, and
Virginia's Information Technology
Interests
She also regularly presents classes on design, management, and use of
the Internet to
SHARE as well as to national and
international organizations.
From April to late October, when she's not doing something related to a
computer or to women's health, she can usually be found watching a
baseball game, mostly the Dodgers, but occasionally the Gators, Bruins,
or Huskies.
Copyright 1998 Virginia R. Hetrick
Most recent update: 09 Jun 1998 21:53
To comment on the content or structure of this page, send email to
Virginia R. Hetrick
at:
drjuice@gte.net
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