Jonathan Oxer, who has been labeled "Australia''s
Geekiest Man," has been hacking on both hardware and software since
he was a little tacker. He is a former president of Linux
Australia, and founder and technical director of Internet Vision
Technologies. He is author of a number of books, including
How
to Build a Website and Stay Sane,
Ubuntu Hacks, and
Quickstart Guide to Google AdWords. He has been surgically
implanted with an RFID chip and is set to host an upcoming TV show
called
SuperHouse (www.superhouse.tv) featuring high-tech
home renovation, open source automation systems, and domestic
hardware hacking. Jonathan has appeared on top-rated TV shows and
been interviewed on dozens of radio stations about his home
automation system. He was technical supervisor for the first season
of the reality TV show
The Phone, has connected his car to
the Internet (www.geekmyride.org), and is also a member of the core
team of Lunar Numbat (www.lunarnumbat.org), an Australian group
working with the European team White Label Space
(www.whitelabelspace.com) on an unmanned moon mission for the
Google Lunar X-Prize (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Oxer).
Hugh Blemings took a radio apart when he
was about eight and never recovered. From this start and an
interest in Ham Radio, he began his career doing hardware and
emedded software development back when 68HC11''s were the latest
and greatest. Hugh has been working on free software since the
mid-90''s for fun and as a (still fun!) paid gig since 1999. He was
co-author of the gnokii project and developed kernel device drivers
for the Keyspan USB-serial adaptors. He worked at IBM''s Linux
Technology Centre as a open source hacker in the Canberra-based
OzLabs team for just shy of eight years, doing everything from
first line management to Linux kernel porting for embedded PowerPC
platforms. He now works on Ubuntu Linux at Canonical in the kernel
team, but remains firmly of the view that any day that involves a
soldering iron, a ''scope and emacs is a good day.