User:Glen Pepicelli

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

About[edit]

Not that uncommon in New York

I live in upstate New York near the state capital Albany and within 200 miles of major cities New York and Boston. If you want to contact me please go to my website at glenp.net.

I'm interested in contributing to the Computer science areas, anywhere else I'll just do typos etc.

What Is This Site?[edit]

Wikipedia is an online hypertext encyclopedia that anyone can contribute to. While it's only a few years old it already has a massive amount of information.

Contributions[edit]

I've made contributions to the following articles:

Articles Elsewhere[edit]

You are NOT allowed to copy these without permission they are registered as copyrighted works. See: Copyright infringement

  • Bitfields, Bitboards, and Beyond Example of bitboards in the Java Language and a discussion of why this optimization works with the Java Virtual Machine (www.OnJava.com publisher: O'Reilly 2005)

Future Topics:

  • StAX
  • eBay
  • XML Over HTTP
  • Floating Point

Me Elsewhere[edit]

Legal[edit]

By using this system I do NOT give up copyright protection for other works I have written. For example I wrote material for the Wikipedia article on bitboards and I also wrote a copyright article on bitboards for O'Reilly. My Wikipedia donation is under the GFDL However this does NOT imply that I give up any rights on my copyright article or that that article is under any public license.

Wikipedia.org Recommendations[edit]

Fractal Junkyard[edit]

The first four iterations of the Koch snowflake.

The Koch Snowflake is very simple fractal compared to the famous Mandelbrot Set. The snowflake article has a program in to generate one in Logo.

From The Article:


The term fractal was coined in 1975 by Benoît Mandelbrot, from the Latin fractus, meaning "broken" or "fractured". Before Mandelbrot coined his term, the common name for such structures (the Koch snowflake, for example) was monster curve.

GUI Junkyard[edit]

Amiga Workbench (1985)

This GUI article has screenshots from over a dozen operating systems including the beloved AmigaOS.

The default color scheme on the Amiga (shown) can (and should) be changed by the user.

Air Force Junkyard[edit]

Helicopters and Fighters at AMARC

The Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Center is home of seven hundred retired F-4 fighter planes.