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Richfife
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Rich is taking a short wikibreak and will be back on Wikipedia when his ennui dies down.
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In case you hadn't guessed, my name is "Rich Fife". Lessee... I was raised in Tucson, AZ and currently live in the SF Bay area. I'm a computer programmer who's mostly worked in Video Games and streaming video. Some interesting tidbits:
I'm not the vocal online pedophile that shares my name. Bleh. I'm sure he insists he's "not technically a pervert". I like tortoises, but not as much as my namesake here: [1]. I'm not a dentist: Is it safe?. I'm ethical, but I'm not an ethicist: [2]. I'm not a harness racer: Tally ho!. I didn't compete in British game shows in the mid 80's: Brain of Britain. I don't go for walks on the freeway: [3]. I don't have a son, and if I did, I wouldn't send him on a Mormon mission to Brazil: [4].
Of course, it's possible I'm just being modest about all of this.
I have, however, done some other stuff of note.
Developed StreamWorks at Xing Technology, the first 24 hour live system for broadcasting audio and video (first in both respects) over the internet. If you listen to live radio or watch live TV on the net, I developed the first system to do that. Of course, the system I wrote has pretty much fallen by the wayside in favor of other technologies that do the same thing, but, hey, I got there first.
I was the first person to use file extensions of the form "MP#" where # is the layer number of the MPEG stream data contained inside. I suppose this kind of means I invented the term MP3, although I only used MP1 and MP2 at the time. I totally forgot this until someone pointed it out to me a couple of years ago. You can also make the argument that since the previous file extension was "MPA" and layer distinctions needed to be added, it was inevitable.
Created the networking architecture for Outlaws, one of the very first Internet capable live action games and the very first networking game from LucasArts.
I also worked on these games: Mysteries of the Sith, Toe Jam and Earl 3 (Mission to Earth), The Sims: Bustin' Out, Jetsons: By George, in Trouble Again (I'm not proud, but I was hungry), Flintstones: Dino Lost in Bedrock, Carl Lewis: Go for the Gold and some Tom and Jerry game I always forget the name of.
Lately I've designated myself a "Recent Changes Rearguard Patroller". What does that mean? I go here: [5], scroll to the bottom and work my way up, only fixing vandalism on pages that are still at their newest version. That way I'm catching things that have almost slipped through the cracks without competing with the guys working the top of the list.
My email address is my user name, followed by an "@", followed by my user name again, followed by a ".com". Easy, no?
The following email addresses represent an experiment with spam. Don't use them to attempt to contact me:
bait1@richfife.com babait2@richfife.com bait3(at)richfife(dot)com
frame|right|This Tireless Contributor Barnstar is presented to User:Richfife, for his amazing investigative work in Wikipedia articles. Presented by Tony the Marine 23:44, 30 November 2005 (UTC)
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My content pushed patrol list: User:Richfife/Content_Pushers