Jump to content

User:DoriSmith

This user is a WikiGnome.
This user helped get "Tom Luckey" listed at Did You Know on the main page on June 20, 2012.
This user helped get "Madrona Manor" listed at Did You Know on the main page on August 8, 2012.
This user uses HotCat to work with categories.
This user has rollback rights on the English Wikipedia.
This user has pending changes reviewer rights on the English Wikipedia.
Email this user
DoriSmith's matrix
This user uses Twinkle to fight vandalism.
Trout this user
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dori Smith

— Wikipedian  —
Name
Dori Smith
Born
Country United States
Current locationHealdsburg, California
Time zonePacific Time Zone
Height5 ft 2 in (1.57 m)
HairRed
EyesBlue
Blood typeAB+
Personality typeINTJ
Family and friends
Marital statusMarried
SpouseHusband
ChildrenOne
SiblingsTwo
PetsOne
Education and employment
OccupationFreelance writer and programmer
High schoolSouth High
UniversityUC Irvine
Hobbies, interests, and beliefs
BooksJavaScript: Visual QuickStart Guide, Dreamweaver: Visual QuickStart Guide
Contact info
Websitedori.com
Blogbackupbrain.com
EmailYes
AIMdoriasmith
GTalkdorismith
Skypedorismith
.Macdori
Facebook[http://facebook.com/dorismith facebook.com/dorismith]
Flickr[http://flickr.com/photos/dorismith/ flickr.com/photos/dorismith/]
Twitter[http://twitter.com/dori twitter.com/dori]
YouTubesmithdori
Account statistics
Joined22 September 2005
(19 years, 3 months and 1 day)
Edit countContributions
PermissionsReviewer, Rollbacker
Userboxes
js-5This user is a professional JavaScript programmer.
HTML-5This user is a professional HTML user.
This user has published 20 books.
This user is a professional editor.

Like a lot of other people on the Web, I started off programming in high school. Unlike a lot of other people on the Web, that was in 1977, before most of them were born.

I learned BASIC on a machine that looked like a typewriter, which was connected via an incredibly slow line to a mainframe several miles away. I found that programming came easily to me and when I realized that I could get paid good money for solving puzzles, a light went on and I said, "This is for me!"

So far as web programming goes, I was mostly in the right place at the right time. I first got online in the early 1990s, as was normal for a computer geek. In the mid-'90s Java and JavaScript came along and they just looked really, really easy to someone who had been programming as long as I had. At that same point I was completely fed up with my dead-end mainframe programming job and was looking for something different, so I jumped ship in 1996 and taught myself rudimentary HTML, Java, and JavaScript.

What I found was that what came so easily to me wasn't quite so easy to non-programmers, and I started teaching classes. I then realized that understanding concepts and being able to explain those same concepts to non-technical people are two very different beasts and that while lots of people can do the former, not so many can do the latter. The same light that had gone on in 1977 went on again in 1997 and I switched gears and changed over to primarily write and teach about web programming.

According to Wikipedia's own guidelines, I qualify as someone who should have an entry (given a couple of best-selling books), but I don't (and do not want one). On the other hand, after more looking around, I was stunned by the number of topics (mostly people) that don't have WP articles; enough so that I started a list. I would be happier if that list was shorter.

I live in Healdsburg, California, which is why I keep a close eye on Healdsburg and its associated pages.