DavidCary

I began my fascination with wiki when I discovered C2 (in 2003). At the time, I thought I was an excellent programmer. Reading C2 cured me of that delusion :-).

Later I was astonished to discover that other wiki exist. Why didn't anyone tell me about them before?

I am hoping that wiki will turn out to be an improved replacement for Usenet and most types of email.

I am excited about the WikiNode project. I see this IndexWiki as being really, really useful for setting up the wiki-node network -- but eventually the wiki-node network will be an improved replacement for the IndexWiki. (Because the wiki-node network is inherently fault-tolerant and scalable, but the IndexWiki has a single point of failure).

I spend a lot of time thinking about fault-tolerant systems. I plan to build a fault-tolerant wiki system Real Soon Now. I'm still waffling over some of the technical details ( "distributed version control system" or "distributed file system" ?), but I think getting a critical mass of people to use it is a bigger challenge.

I like to think I am a better-than-average . But is this merely a delusion that I will be cured of once I start reading the GoodEnglishRules wiki? :-)

I plan on learning enough Deutsch to make myself understood to , but I still have a long way to go.

Feel free to leave a comment on User talk:DavidCary.

Time Zone
Time Zone cruft:

Pacific Time Zone:

or in other words:

wiki I started

 * the visual wiki Visual (alas, temporarily offline)
 * dave cary
 * Computer Graphics Wiki
 * the mad scientist wiki mad-scientist-wiki
 * the software bazaar wiki
 * ... and a few others.

wiki I sysop
I'm a sysop at several wiki including:

Whee! I'm a sysop at WikiIndex! The power -- it's rushing to my head! --DavidCary 09:17, 1 October 2007 (EDT)


 * good english rules
 * open Circuits wiki
 * massmind
 * wikichristian.org
 * compass wiki

wiki I visit

 * WikiBooks
 * CommunityWiki
 * ... many others ...