Christi Alice ScarboroughI don't get much time to work on these pages. As a result, they're somewhat spartan and minimalist. Hopefully, some day, I'll get around to doing something pretty with CSS and Javascript buttons, but today is not that day. In the mean time, this must suffice.
Back when the web was young and fresh faced, everyone who was everyone had a personal webpage. These days, blogs and MySpace seem to have taken over the role served by these pages, which used to be there to provide a little background information on the people you might come across on this strange new frontier. Well the frontier is no longer new, but it's still pretty strange, and for better or for worse, we're all a bit less open than we were in the old days. (It's coming up to 15 years since the first time I connected to the internet. It really doesn't seem that long.)
These days, I'm not so sure I could tell you as much about myself as I knew back when I was first creating one of these pages. Everything seems to be much more fluid than it was back then. I don't mind that, because there's no growth without change, and I love to do both. So, then, the essentials. I'm female, a technophile, a neophile, and a dreamer. Pretty much everything else is subject to change without notice.
The world is a very visual place. In recognition of that, the curious might wish to explore what I look like.
All the content below is copyright Christi Scarborough unless otherwise specified, and may not be reproduced without prior permission.
Over the years, I've produced various pieces of open source software. Some of my work you'll find on the Rockbox website (needless to say, I'm but one of many contributors). Other software written by me can be found in my archive.
I like to take photos. Mostly of cats. They live in my web album.
The Eye of Argon - This is widely acknowledged to be one of the worst fantasy stories of all time. Fortunately I didn't write it, but sadly neither did I write the amusing Mystery Science Theater 3000 style commentary that frames it. It is included here to be preserved for future generations.
Folding@Home is a very worthy distributed computing project that's being used to calculate the shape of many proteins found in nature for the purpose of medical research. I've been contributing for a while. Here are my Folding stats.
This is my GPG public key, which is also available from the public keyservers.