(see also: text resume)
Aaron Swartz
me@aaronsw.com
349 Marshman
Highland Park, IL 60035
(847) 432-8857 (Google PhoneBook)
Awards
- Summer Founders Program
- Funding and assistance to run a startup for the summer of 2005.
- Technorati Developers Contest
- Free iPod mini (2005)
- Apple WWDC Student Scholarship
- Free pass to the Worldwide Developers Conference and special exception made for age (2001)
- ArsDigita Prize
- $1000, Web Server (2000)
- Scholarship For Excellence
- Four year scholarship to North Shore Country Day School (2000)
Projects
- Zpedia
- Free, online radical encyclopedia
Work
- Infogami, Founder
- Summer 2005
- Creative Commons, RDF Advisor
- January 2002
- RDF Core Working Group, Member
- April 2001
- DCMI Architecture Working Group, Member
- January 2001
- Semantic Web Agreement Group
- January 2001
- RSS-DEV Working Group, Member
- August 2000
Press
I've been in the news several times, but the links broke: Boston Herald, USA Today, Eight-Forty-Eight (RealAudio)
Chicago Tribune: Highland Park teen is finalist in Web competition (23 June 2000)
AP: Teens spin Web of future (24 June 2000)
Mass High Tech: ArsDigita Foundation awards Net design prize to under-18 crowd [JPG] (10 July 2000)
Metafilter: Boy Genius (26 February 2001) ∞
Sunday Times: Teenager in a million (29 April 2001)
Ask Tim: Books for a Younger Audience (December 2001) ∞
San Jose Mercury News: Dan Gillmor: The technology behind Napster is far from dead (14 May 2002) ∞
BBC NewsHour: Warchalking: the new phone phreaking? (1.8MB Ogg, 3.2MB MP3) (19 September 2003)
NPR Weekend Edition: Wireless Tagging (1.7MB Ogg, 2.7MB MP3, streaming RealAudio) (21 September 2003)
Day to Day: Hacker Culture and Computer Viruses (21 August 2003)
Digital Citizen: Alternative Compensation Systems interview (15 December 2003) #
under the iron: [Interview with] Aaron Swartz (23 January 2004) ∞ #
San Jose Mercury News: What about the [Google] IPO? (21 April 2004) ∞ #
Wired News: Searching for The New York Times (14 July 2004) ∞ #
Wired News: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Login (20 July 2004) ∞ #
Wired Magazine: Undergraduate Overachiever (24 August 2004) #
CNET News.com: Site seeks to spur political ad swaps (19 October 2004) ∞ #
Newsweek: What Your College Kid is Really Up To (13 December 2004) ∞
Hi International: Faces: Aaron Swartz, Computer Prodigy (December 2004) ∞
Hack!: Tonårshacker med imponerande meritlista (22 June 2005) ∞/translation
Wired News: Stars Rise at Startup Summer Camp (13 September 2005) ∞ # (Korean edition)
Hartford Courant: Keeping It Really Simple: RSS News Feeds Via E-Mail: A Technology That Actually Delivers (15 September 2005) ∞ #
Salon.com: The Fix: Will Vinnifer usurp Brangelina? Paris -- canceled! Plus: Comparing O'Reilly with McCarthy. (13 October 2005) ∞
Techsploitation: Won't Somebody Think of the Pings? (15 November 2005) ∞
Boston Globe: The idealists, the optimists, and the world they share (13 February 2006) ∞
additional story | front-page photo | additional photo ∞
Boston Globe: The Ladder Isn't The Only Way Up (accompanying photo) (19 February 2006) ∞
New York Observer: When Intellectuals Had a Real Magazine: Viva Lingua Franca! (24 April 2006) ∞
PBS MediaShift: Should Community-Edited News Sites Pay Top Editors? (25 July 2006)
Boston Phoenix: Anyone can edit (11 August 2006)
Future Tense: Who writes Wikipedia? (6 September 2006) ∞
SFGate: Isn't Your Kid a CEO?: These days, middle schoolers are launching startups. What's next? Second graders with IPOs? (6 September 2007)
amNewYork: G-Phone: Cracking the Google mystery (7 September 2007)
Boston Globe: Ever-younger entreprenuers: Internet, low costs lead to early-in-life startups (7 September 2007)
<sbp> wow, how have you been in the news that many times? it's obscene
Publications
Aaron Swartz, "MusicBrainz: A Semantic Web Service", IEEE Intelligent Systems, Jan/Feb 2002, pp. 76-77. (PDF, old HTML)
Swartz, A. and Hendler, J. "The Semantic Web: A Network of Content for the Digital City", Proceedings Second Annual Digital Cities Workshop, Kyoto, Japan, October, 2001. (HTML, based on The Semantic Web in Breadth)
A short correction letter to Extra! (February 2005):
At Stanford,
Not of StanfordIn your most recent issue (9-10/04), you quoted someone saying that Stanley Kurtz was a Stanford professor who had done research on the harms of gay marriage. Stanley Kurtz is not a professor at Stanford, but instead a Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, a right-wing think tank located on the Stanford campus.
Aaron Swartz
Stanford, Calif.
Contributor
Lerone D. Wilson, Aarvark'd: 12 Weeks With Geeks (Boondoggle Films, 2005) [screenshot]
Tara Calishan & Rael Dornfest, Google Hacks (O'Reilly, 2ed, 2004)
Joel Spolsky (ed.), The Best Software Writing I (Apress, 2005) (working title: //comment)
Tech editor
Sarah Milstein and Rael Dornfest, Google: The Missing Manual (O'Reilly, 2004)
Mentioned
Ben Hammersley, Content Syndication with RSS (O'Reilly, 2003)
Hacks
- sanitize
- bringing sanitiy to world of messed-up data
- atomstream
- Get updates more quickly.
- feedfinder
- Find the Web feed for a Web page
- arcget
- Retrieve sites from the Internet Archive
- Aaron's Do The Right Thing
- CGI to aid in web searching
- HTML Display (source)
- CGI to display HTML snippets
- HTML Diff (source)
- creates an HTML page highlighting the differences between two other HTML pages
- Aaron Text Converter (source)
- converts structured ASCII into HTML
- Stock Quotes in RDF (source)
- converts Yahoo! Quote information into RDF
- HTML2Text Converter (source)
- converts HTML into plain ASCII text
- TRAMP: Makes RDF more Pythonic
- Makes an RDF document look like a bunch of nest Python dictionaries and lists.
- New York Times as a Weblog (source)
- Grabs the latest news from the New York Times website and displays it in chronological order.
- rss2email aggregator
- Grabs your favorite RSS feeds and breaks them up into story-sized email chunks which are delivered to your mailbox.
- secroll
- Securely roll an n-sided die between two parties.
- xmltramp
- Easily access XML documents in Python.
Websites
- web.resource.org
- Hosts important Internet specifications, including RSS 1.0 and Creative Commons
- Google Weblog
- Tracking updates and changes to the Google search engine (Started 17 March 2002)
- Swhack
- Technology news and chat (Started 25 July 2001)
- check.theinfo.org
- Standards validation service
- Schoolyard Subversion
- Web journal on reforming the educational system (Started 14 August 2000)
- LogicError
- Hypertextual database of interesting people, projects and programs
- RSS Info
- News and reference on the RSS format
- Not A Bug
- Personal projects website
- Swartzfam.com
- Family website
Places
- 23 April 2002: Boston / Cambridge, Massachusetts for 6.171 to speak on REST and the Semantic Web (details)
- 7-11 May 2002: Honolulu, Hawaii for WWW2002, to speak on the Plesh
- 13-16 May 2002: San Jose, California for O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference, to help present the Creative Commons
- 31 May 2002: Cambridge, Massachusetts for Creative Commons Technical Advisory Board Meeting
- 22-26 July 2002: San Diego, California for the O'Reilly Open Source Convention to introduce the Creative Commons Metadata system
- 9-10 September 2002: New York, New York for Creative Commons F2F
- 8-9 October 2002: Washington D.C. for the Eldred case (notes, report)
- 18 November 2002: Las Vegas, Nevada for Comdex Fall to participate in a featured Great Debate on the future of technology
- 15-19 December 2002: San Francisco, California for the Creative Commons Launch Party (review, report)
- 27 February - 2 March: Bay Area, California for DRM Conference, Spectrum Policy
- 7 March 2003: Austin, Texas for South by Southwest Interactive
- 26 March 2003: Tokyo, Japan for vacation
- 22-25 April 2003: Santa Clara, California for Emerging Technology
- 27-29 May 2003: Cambridge, MA for OSCOM (speaking)
- 30 June - 4 July: Stanford, CA for ILAW 2003
- 15-19 August 2003: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada for a wedding (note)
- 5-9 December 2003: Cambridge, MA for ACS meeting and snowstorm (and thus thanksgiving)
- 22 April 2004: San Francisco, Califonria for CFP2004 (Berkeley) and Stanford Admit Weekend (Palo Alto).
- September 2004: Woods Hole, MA and Sebastapol, CA (missed) for secret confabs
- 21-27 December 2004: New York, NY with family.
- 20 September 2005: I begin at Stanford University.
- August 2005: Sebastapol, CA for FOO Camp
- June 2005: I move to Cambridge, MA for the Summer Founders Program.
- August 2005: Chicago, Illinois to visit family.
- 1-4 November 2005: San Francisco, California for Google, Yahoo, and VCs.
- 13-15 November 2005: Chicago, Illinois to visit grandparents.
Experience
Web: AOLserver, Apache, Zope, ACS, Python, PyWX, WebWare, Skunkweb
Databases: Oracle, PostgreSQL, BerkeleyDB
Languages: C, JavaScript, Tcl, Python, bash, Java
Operating Systems: MacOS Classic, Mac OS X, Red Hat GNU/Linux, Debian GNU/Linux, Windows, DOS, OS/2
Interests
Math, Crypto, Semantic Web, World Wide Web, Hypertext, Emergent (P2P) Networks, Agoric Networks, Syndication, Education, Freedoms, Free Software