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John and Battelle
In 1994, John Battelle, co-founding editor, commissioned Jules Marshall to write a piece on the Zippies.
Over the years, Wireds writers have included Jorn Barger, John Perry Barlow, John Battelle, Paul Boutin, Stewart Brand, Gareth Branwyn, Po Bronson, Scott Carney, Michael Chorost, Douglas Coupland, James Daly, Joshua Davis, J. Bradford DeLong, Mark Dery, David Diamond, Patrick Di Justo, Cory Doctorow, Esther Dyson, Mark Frauenfelder, Simson Garfinkel, William Gibson, Dan Gillmor Mike Godwin, George Gilder, Lou Ann Hammond, Danny Hillis, Steven Johnson, Bill Joy, Jon Katz, Leander Kahney, Richard Kadrey, Jaron Lanier, Lawrence Lessig, Paul Levinson, Steven Levy, John Markoff, Wil McCarthy, Glyn Moody, Charles Platt, Josh Quittner, Spencer Reiss, Howard Rheingold, Rudy Rucker, Paul Saffo, Evan Schwartz, Peter Schwartz, Alex Steffen, Neal Stephenson, Bruce Sterling, Chris Hardwick, John Hodgman, Kevin Warwick, Dave Winer, Belinda Parmar and Gary Wolf.
In the 1940s, Battelle's Vice-President of Engineering, John Crout made it possible for Battelle researchers, including William Bixby and Paul Andrus, to develop Chester Carlson's concept of dry copying.
In 2004, the project incorporated as Happy Mutants LLC, and John Battelle became the blog's business manager.
* Video John Doerr interview with John Battelle
John Linwood Battelle ( born November 4, 1965 ) is an entrepreneur, author and journalist.
In their opening remarks, John Battelle and Tim O ' Reilly outlined their definition of the " Web as Platform ", where software applications are built upon the Web as opposed to upon the desktop.
Another Mobile-based newspaper would begin publishing on December 10, 1821 as The Mobile Commercial Register by former Boston, Massachusetts resident and Savannah, Georgia merchant Jonathan Battelle, along with John W. Townsend of a Montgomery, Alabama newspaper.
* John Battelle, author, journalist, and co-founder of Wired magazine

John and co-founder
* Sir Halford John Mackinder ( 1861 1947 ), author of The Geographical Pivot of History, co-founder of the London School of Economics, along with the Geographical Association.
* John Brown ( Rhode Island ) ( 1736 1803 ), U. S. representative ( F RI, 1799 1801 ), co-founder of Brown University
* March 29 Charles Wesley, co-founder ( with brother, John Wesley ) of the religious movement now known as Methodism ( b. 1707 )
* John of Matha, Saint, co-founder of the Order of the Holy Trinity for the Redemption of Captives
John D. Carmack II ( born August 20, 1970 ) is an American game programmer and the co-founder of id Software.
On September 30, 2010, CNN. com published an Op-ed titled " Ashley Judd: Electronics fuel unspeakable violence " by Ashley Judd and the Enough Project's co-founder John Prendergast regarding the continued violence in Congo.
Saint Raphael Kalinowski ( 1835 1907 ) was the first friar to be sainted in the Order since co-founder Saint John of the Cross.
It is named after Headmaster John Mitchinson, co-founder of the Headmasters ' Conference.
The " Challenge Cup " was invented by John Gramlick Sr., a co-founder of the Vienna Cricket and Football Club.
Examples include John Baker, founder of Desire2Learn, David Cheriton, co-founder and chief scientist of Arista Networks, Mike Lazaridis, co-founder and former co-CEO of Research in Motion, Prem Watsa, chairman of Fairfax Financial and the current chancellor of the Waterloo, Steven Woods, co-founder of NeoEdge Networks and Quack. com.
* John Overton, ( 1766 1833 ), born in Louisa County, notable political leader who was an adviser to Andrew Jackson and co-founder of Memphis, Tennessee.
From the 1960s, one of his main rivals was civil rights leader and co-founder of the nationalist SDLP, John Hume.
* John Greene ( settler ), co-founder of Warwick, Rhode Island
* John Hampton, co-founder of Toys for Tots
Several well-known people live here, including Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle Corporation, who spent nine years building an architecturally authentic, $ 200 + million Japanese feudal castle and man-made lake in Woodside ; Gordon E. Moore, co-founder of Intel and originator of Moore's Law ; John Thompson, CEO of Symantec ; Neil Young, rock musician and songwriter, who owns a ranch and recording studio there ; Michelle Pfeiffer, actress, and her husband David E. Kelley, producer ; Thomas Siebel, founder of Siebel Systems ; Scott Cook, co-founder of Intuit, Inc .; John Doerr, venture capitalist ; Dr. Carl Djerassi, novelist and member of team that developed the birth control pill ; Kenneth Fisher, founder of Fisher Investments, Forbes columnist, author, and local historian ; Susan Dawson, philanthropist ; and Joan Baez, folk singer.
* John McGraw-businessman, co-founder of Wenona, Michigan, now part of Bay City, Cornell University philanthropist.
He represented New Jersey's 8th congressional district from 1903 to 1907 and from 1909 to 1911, and was a co-founder and former president of the publishing company John Wiley & Sons.
John Forest, Dean of Wells and a close friend of Beke's, donated such an amount that the College promised to recognise him as a co-founder ; it did not keep this promise.
* John Lloyd — current Supernumerary Fellow, journalist, contributor to the Financial Times, and co-founder of the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at Oxford University.

John and Wired
The three masked men on the cover of that edition of Wired were prominent cypherpunks Tim May, Eric Hughes and John Gilmore.
* Wired ( book ), a 1984 by Bob Woodward about the American actor and comedian John Belushi
*" And the One Book, One Twitter Winner Is ..., Wired, April 29, 2010, John C Abell.
He also wrote the book Wired, about the Hollywood drug culture and the death of comic John Belushi.
Wired magazine reported in their February 2004 article " John Sperling Wants You to Live Forever " that his fortune is quickly approaching US $ 3 billion, and has plans to donate it to human biology research if and when he dies.
* Wired Magazine, ' John Sperling Wants You to Live Forever '
His stage career included appearances with John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra ( where he replaced legendary drummer Billy Cobham ), Jeff Beck ( on Beck's album Wired ) and Tommy Bolin Band.
# Actors playing the character of a real, or fictionalized entertainer other than Elvis Presley who impersonate him as part of a stage act within the movie's plot itself, e. g., as in the movie biographies Wired and Man on the Moon, where the characters of comedians John Belushi ( played by Michael Chiklis ) and Andy Kaufman ( played by Jim Carrey ) are seen impersonating Elvis Presley.
The film was based on the 1997 article " A Farewell to Arms " written for Wired magazine by John Carlin.
Using a Wired article entitled " A Farewell to Arms " by John Carlin, Marconi crafted a screenplay about a cyber-terrorist attack on the U. S. The attack procedure is known as a " fire sale ", depicting a three-stage coordinated attack on a country's transportation, telecommunications, financial, and utilities infrastructure systems.
Alumni of the site include Bungie Studios ' Luke Smith, IGN. com's Jim Reilly, FastCompany. com's Adam Barenblat, Wired. com's John Brownlee ( writing as Florian Eckhardt ), Eliza Gauger and Vox Games ' Brian Crecente.
The Culture24 Chairman is John Newbigin, who was named as one of Wired Magazine's top 100 people shaping the digital world in May 2010.

John and magazine
Camelot was a hit nonetheless, with a poignant coda ; immediately following the assassination of John F. Kennedy, his widow told Life magazine that JFK's administration reminded her of the " one brief shining moment " of Lerner and Loewe's Camelot.
The magazine discovered such poets as Gwendolyn Brooks, James Merrill, and John Ashbery.
This usage dates from 1843 when Punch magazine applied the term to satirical drawings in its pages, particularly sketches by John Leech.
Historically, the black leather female catsuit entered dominant fetish culture in the 1950s with the AtomAge magazine and its connections to fetish fashion designer John Sutcliffe.
" In Time magazine, Richard Corliss wrote, " John Carpenter is offering this summer's moviegoers a rare opportunity: to escape from the air-conditioned torpor of ordinary entertainment into the hothouse humidity of their own paranoia.
John Backus said during a 1979 interview with Think, the IBM employee magazine, " Much of my work has come from being lazy.
At Eton he played tricks on John Crace, his Master in College, among which was to enter a spoof advertisement in a College magazine implying pederasty.
The online magazine Blogcritics criticized the list for introducing some undeserving guitarists while forgetting some artists perceived being perhaps more worthy, such as Johnny Marr, Phil Keaggy or John Petrucci.
A curriculum-free philosophy of homeschooling may be called unschooling, a term coined in 1977 by American educator and author John Holt in his magazine Growing Without Schooling.
In the late 19th century in the United Kingdom, there existed individualist anarchists such as Wordsworth Donisthorpe, Joseph Hiam Levy, Joseph Greevz Fisher, John Badcock, Jr., Albert Tarn, and Henry Albert Seymour who were close to the United States group around Benjamin Tucker ´ s magazine Liberty.
* John B. Ford ( born 1963 ), English horror writer and publisher whose fiction focuses on death and madness ; launched magazine, Terror Tales, in 1996 and Rainfall Records and Books in 2001
* John Gardner Ford ( born 1952 ), American business executive who co-founded Outside magazine in 1977 ; second son of President Gerald R. Ford ; best known as Jack Ford
* John Lennon and Yoko Ono slideshow by Life magazine
The magazine also ran a series of cartoons called 101 Uses for a John Major ( based on a comic book of some ten years earlier, called 101 Uses for a Dead Cat ), in which Major was illustrated serving a number of bizarre purposes, such as a train-spotter's anorak.
* John Brown Group, British magazine publisher with a stable including Viz and Fortean Times
* John Brisben Walker ( 1847 1931 ), American entrepreneur and magazine publisher
" John Holmstrom, founding editor of Punk magazine, recalls feeling " punk rock had to come along because the rock scene had become so tame that like Billy Joel and Simon and Garfunkel were being called rock and roll, when to me and other fans, rock and roll meant this wild and rebellious music.
Club owner Hilly Kristal called the movement " street rock "; John Holmstrom credits Aquarian magazine with using punk " to describe what was going on at CBGBs ".
In a magazine interview, veteran panellist John Sessions commented, “ He ’ s the man for the job.
Heinlein, a notable writer of science fiction short stories, was one of a group of writers who came to prominence under the editorship of John W. Campbell, Jr. in his Astounding Science Fiction magazine — though Heinlein denied that Campbell influenced his writing to any great degree.
Heinlein began his career as a writer of stories for Astounding Science Fiction, a highly respected science fiction magazine, which was edited by John Campbell.
Heinlein is usually identified, along with Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke, as one of the three masters of science fiction to arise in the so-called Golden Age of science fiction, associated with John W. Campbell and his magazine Astounding .< ref >
John was a newspaperman, sports columnist and magazine writer.
Isaac Asimov, a science fiction writer who began his career with John W, Campbell in Astounding magazine in the 1940s, said of the New Wave: " I hope that when the New Wave has deposited its froth and receded, the vast and solid shore of science fiction will appear once more.
In 1990, Throttle magazine interviewed They Might Be Giants and clarified the meaning of the song " Ana Ng ": John Flansburgh said, " Ng is a Vietnamese name.

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