User:K.lee

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I am currently attending graduate school at the University of Washington for computer science.

For the curious, here's my homepage.

Contents

[edit] Important Note

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Therefore, in the future, please support and link to the original Wikipedia, not its mirrors. Thank you.

[edit] Licensing of Contributions

I agree to multi-license all my contributions, with the exception of my user pages, as described below:

Multi-licensed with all Creative Commons Attribution Licences
I agree to multi-license my text contributions, unless otherwise stated, under the GFDL and the Creative Commons licences by-sa v1.0, by v2.0, by-nd v2.0, by-nc v2.0, by-nc-nd v2.0, by-nc-sa v2.0, and by-sa v2.0. Please be aware that other contributors might not do the same, so if you want to use my contributions under alternate licensing, please check the CC dual-licence and Multi-licensing guides.

Additionally, Wikimedia may re-license as it sees fit:

Licensing rights granted to Wikimedia Foundation
I grant non-exclusive permission for the Wikimedia Foundation Inc. to relicense my text and media contributions, including any images, audio clips, or video clips, under any copyleft license that it chooses, provided it maintains the free and open spirit of the GFDL. This permission acknowledges that future licensing needs of the Wikimedia projects may need adapting in unforeseen fashions to facilitate other uses, formats, and locations. It is given for as long as this banner remains.

[edit] Selected Contributions

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

My first logged-in edit ever:

Articles to which I've contributed significant original content:

Articles to which I've done significant editing for style:

  • Microsoft: This is a contentious entry, for obvious reasons. I've tried to limit my editing to cleaning up prose, reorganization for flow, and NPOV.
  • Computer mouse

Articles to which I hope to make significant edits in the future:

Notable uploads:

[edit] Miscellaneous

Current rant:' Over time, a maddening entropy has grown to inflict nearly all articles related to programming languages. For whatever reason, programming language articles are not served well by the gradual accumulation of random facts, at which Wikipedia excels. This may be because too many people overestimate their own knowledge of programming languages, or because too many people confuse familiarity with a few programming languages with a systematic understanding of programming languages as a field. Unfortunately, I do not have the time right now to rewrite the articles into better form, but if I ever get around to it, you can expect major changes.

Sub-rant: I'm not merely whining. I do spend time editing Wikipedia and I think it's literally one of the Great Wonders of the Post-Internet World. As far as I'm concerned, it's right up there with Google and Project Gutenberg. However, I currently spend most of my Wikipedia-budgeted time on either
  • damage control on computer-related topics,
  • my suggested PL rewrite, or
  • minor edits-for-fun on articles unrelated to programming languages.
I've observed that this is because significantly rewriting an article, in a way that would meaningfully improve its quality, takes a big chunk of labor that's not easy, and (for various reasons) frequently not fun. Those big chunks of time don't come often, for me or for most other people. However, should I ever get such time, consider this rant an explanation in advance for why I replaced 90% of an existing article, and meanwhile left out your explanation of foobar typing or whatever.