Jack ma children
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Writing
Jack written over 1000 published articles on different aspects of embedded development, as well as six books on the subject. He is editor of The Embedded Muse, a twice-monthly newsletter that has over 35,000 subscribers..
Lecturing and Teaching
Jack lectures at symposiums and conferences on electronics and software all over the world. His Better Firmware Faster seminar has helped thousands of developers get products to market faster with fewer problems.
Jack has presented over 100 papers at conferences on six continents. He has been the keynote speaker at numerous conferences including the Embedded Systems Engineering Kongress (Stuttgart, 2014), International Conference on Reliable Software Technologies (Berlin, 2013), Embedded Systems Conference (2019, 2008, 2003, and 1998), ESC-Brazil (2013, 2011), ESC-India (2013, 2007), JD Conference (2007, 2005), Øredev 2006 (Malmo, Sweden) and CIISA 2007 (Guadalajara, Mexico).
Expert WitnessJack works as an expert witness and has testified in depositions, in Federal District Court and before the ITC. More informat
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Jack: A Biography of Jack London
By Andrew Sinclair
In 1913, Jack London was the highest-paid, best-known and most popular writer in the world…
Today, more than a century after his birth, Jack London’s books remain popular across the globe. European critics are even calling him the finest American novelist of all time.
The vitality, stamina, and passion which marked Jack London’s best work also filled his personal life with drama and adventure. From his impoverished and precocious boyhood, he entered his stormy adolescence as an oyster pirate and tramp. His gruelling months in the Klondike Gold Rush gave way to a bitter literary apprenticeship. This was followed by an intense involvement in Marxism and, aged twenty-seven, a leap to fame with Call of the Wild.
London’s inexhaustible energy and his sheer, all-conquering charm made him the hero of a myth. But there was nothing mythical about his prodigious deeds and productivity. Whether he was making headlines as a war correspondent, sailing his ketch across the Pacific or carrying on a scandalous love af
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Contributor Profile
A contributing editor to The Atlantic Monthly since 1992, Jack Miles is an accomplished theological scholar. He studied as a Jesuit seminarian from 1960 to 1970 at such prestigious institutions as the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome and the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. In 1971 he received a Ph.D. in Near Eastern Languages from Harvard University, where he concentrated on the study of the Hebrew Bible. In subsequent years he taught in the Theology Department at Loyola University of Chicago, served as assistant director of Scholars Press, and was an editor at Doubleday and the University of California Press. From 1985 to 1995 he worked for The Los Angeles Times, where he contributed hundreds of articles, book reviews, and editorials. In the wake of the 1992 riots in Los Angeles, Miles investigated the dilemmas posed by illegal immigration in his debut article for The Atlantic, "Blacks vs. Browns" (October 1992). America's contentious immigration policies were the focus of two of his subsequen
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