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My fellow Wikipedians,
Hello fellow Wikipedians!

You have, conceivably, come here in search of more information on the nature of the man behind JustinWick.


== Quick facts ==
== Quick facts ==


* I am currently an AI researcher specializing in automated speech recognition (ASR) and computational linguistics at [[Microsoft]].
* I have a Bachelors degree in Applied [[Physics]] and a Masters in [[Computer Science]] from [[Cornell University]].
* I hold a Bachelors degree in Applied [[Physics]] and a Masters in [[Computer Science]], both from [[Cornell University]].
* I worked on the operations staff for the [[Mars Exploration Rover]] mission during [[2004]] at the [[JPL|Jet Propulsion Lab]]. Among other things, I am one of the developers of [[Maestro (software)|Maestro]].
* I worked on the operations staff for the [[Mars Exploration Rover]] mission during [[2004]] at the [[JPL|Jet Propulsion Lab]]. Among other things, I am one of the developers of [[Maestro (software)|Maestro]].
* I have worked on [[MHD]] simulations at Cornell University, in [[Fortran]].
* I have worked on astrophysical [[MHD]] simulations at Cornell University in [[Fortran]], focusing on [[accretion disk|accretion]] of charged matter onto [[magnetar|highly magnetic]] [[neutron star|neutron stars]].
* I have credits for special effects on the Nova Documentary "Welcome to Mars" and the IMAX Film "Roving Mars", for which I developed and applied algorithms for processing terrain data and rendering inhomogenous, high-albedo volumes, among other things.
* I have credits for special effects on the [[Nova_(American_TV_program)|Nova]] Documentaries ''Welcome to Mars'' and ''Is there Life on Mars'', as well as the IMAX Film ''[[Roving Mars]]''. For these films I developed and applied algorithms for processing terrain data and rendering inhomogenous, high-albedo volumes, as well as a cache-efficient out-of-memory kd-tree point cloud storage format, as well as a high-performance piecewise convolutional rendering algorithm for antialiased moving starfields.
* I was the lead engineer on a massively multiplayer online game with over one million monthly active players at [[Blue Fang Games]], developed in [[Scala (programming language)|Scala]] using [[Project Darkstar]].
* I hold the patent [https://patents.google.com/patent/US20150039854A1/en US20150039854A1 "Vectorized lookup of floating point values"], which accelerates dequantization of block data (usually matrices) on embedded processors.
* More information can be found on my [https://www.linkedin.com/in/justinwick/ LinkedIn], [https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=-dHrrJ0AAAAJ&hl=en&scioq=jv+wick Google Scholar], and [https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2100961/ IMDb] page.


== Why am I on Wikipedia ==
== Why am I on Wikipedia ==


I enjoy wikipedia because it's a productive way for me to work on writing skills, no matter how much or little time I have available. It is a bit [[Wikipedia Addiction|addictive]], however.
I enjoy Wikipedia because it's a productive way for me to work on writing skills, no matter how much or little time I have available. It is a bit [[Wikipedia Addiction|addictive]], however.


== What are my goals on Wikipedia? ==


I used to enjoy starting new articles, but nowadays I'm mostly concerned with factual inaccuracies, [[Wikipedia:Verifiability|lack of citations]], and [[Wikipedia:Copyright|copyright violations]].
== What are my goals on Wikipedia ==

I'm mostly concerned with factual inaccuracies, [[Wikipedia:Verifiability|lack of citations]], and [[Wikipedia:Copyright|copyright violations]].

== What is Wikipedia [Obsolete] ==

One of the great things about Wikipedia is that I am allowed to [[Criticisim of Wikipedia|criticize]] it. I think that it is very possible that the Wikipedia of tomorrow will be a very different entity, with differing rules of operation, however the Wikipedia of today is hopelessly [[egalitarian]]. In the real world, [[truth]] is not decided democratically. The fact that a nobel laurate has the same editing capacity on Wikipedia as a five year old deeply disturbs me, and underlies much of [[groupthink]] seen on Wikipedia.

Also, while I believe [[NPOV]] is a nice ideal, we are certainly nowhere near this in many articles (especially those dealing with History). I don't think that Wikipedia ''can'' be NPOV on certain subjects if it is to reflect only information sourced from accepted, published works. There are so many types of biases, including source selection, omission, phrasing, and of course the ultimate fact that history is always, always written by the victor. The countless societies that have been purged from existence have no voice of their own - they cannot explain their crimes and triumphs.

I've come to the conclusion that Wikipedia is a mass hobby project that is producing a very useful "first source" for information on certain areas, mostly on things that people find "interesting."


== Why is Wikipedia useful? ==
== Why is Wikipedia useful? ==


The two most useful things in any wikipedia article are the introductory text (usually contains reasonably good definitions), and the references/external links. On a good article, there's plenty of places to go to learn more if you really want to know about a subject.
The two most useful things in any Wikipedia article are the introductory text (usually contains reasonably good definitions), and the references/external links. On a good article, there's plenty of places to go to learn more if you really want to know about a subject.


I think Wikipedia's Featured Articles tend to make it a great source of intellectual entertainment. FAs are usually far beyond encyclopedic articles in a real encyclopedia, more an amazing work of nonfiction. Because they have been polished to a gleaming near-perfection, Featured Articles represent very well what Wikipedia wants so desperately to be (and may yet some day become, at least on some topics).
I think Wikipedia's Featured Articles tend to make it a great source of intellectual entertainment. FAs are usually far beyond encyclopedic articles in a real encyclopedia, more an amazing work of nonfiction. Because they have been polished to a gleaming near-perfection, Featured Articles represent very well what Wikipedia wants so desperately to be (and may yet some day become, at least on some topics).


Also the Talk pages serve to illuminate contraversies on an issue and gauge different opinions. I find these instructive to read on occasion as well.
Also the Talk pages serve to illuminate controversies on an issue and gauge different opinions. I find these instructive to read on occasion as well.



== More info on me ==
== More info on me ==

* [https://www.linkedin.com/in/justinwick/ My LinkedIn profile], , and [https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2100961/ IMDb]
* [https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=-dHrrJ0AAAAJ&hl=en&scioq=jv+wick My Google Scholar profile]
* [https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2100961/ My IMDb profile]


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Latest revision as of 19:59, 29 October 2022

Hello fellow Wikipedians!

Quick facts

[edit]
  • I am currently an AI researcher specializing in automated speech recognition (ASR) and computational linguistics at Microsoft.
  • I hold a Bachelors degree in Applied Physics and a Masters in Computer Science, both from Cornell University.
  • I worked on the operations staff for the Mars Exploration Rover mission during 2004 at the Jet Propulsion Lab. Among other things, I am one of the developers of Maestro.
  • I have worked on astrophysical MHD simulations at Cornell University in Fortran, focusing on accretion of charged matter onto highly magnetic neutron stars.
  • I have credits for special effects on the Nova Documentaries Welcome to Mars and Is there Life on Mars, as well as the IMAX Film Roving Mars. For these films I developed and applied algorithms for processing terrain data and rendering inhomogenous, high-albedo volumes, as well as a cache-efficient out-of-memory kd-tree point cloud storage format, as well as a high-performance piecewise convolutional rendering algorithm for antialiased moving starfields.
  • I was the lead engineer on a massively multiplayer online game with over one million monthly active players at Blue Fang Games, developed in Scala using Project Darkstar.
  • I hold the patent US20150039854A1 "Vectorized lookup of floating point values", which accelerates dequantization of block data (usually matrices) on embedded processors.
  • More information can be found on my LinkedIn, Google Scholar, and IMDb page.

Why am I on Wikipedia

[edit]

I enjoy Wikipedia because it's a productive way for me to work on writing skills, no matter how much or little time I have available. It is a bit addictive, however.

What are my goals on Wikipedia?

[edit]

I used to enjoy starting new articles, but nowadays I'm mostly concerned with factual inaccuracies, lack of citations, and copyright violations.

Why is Wikipedia useful?

[edit]

The two most useful things in any Wikipedia article are the introductory text (usually contains reasonably good definitions), and the references/external links. On a good article, there's plenty of places to go to learn more if you really want to know about a subject.

I think Wikipedia's Featured Articles tend to make it a great source of intellectual entertainment. FAs are usually far beyond encyclopedic articles in a real encyclopedia, more an amazing work of nonfiction. Because they have been polished to a gleaming near-perfection, Featured Articles represent very well what Wikipedia wants so desperately to be (and may yet some day become, at least on some topics).

Also the Talk pages serve to illuminate controversies on an issue and gauge different opinions. I find these instructive to read on occasion as well.

More info on me

[edit]