I am currently a Ph.D. graduate student in the Computer and Information Science department at the University of Oregon. In 2007 I got my master's degree from UC San Diego, and in 2000 I got a B.A. from Tufts University. I wrote my master's thesis on finding bugs in source code using mutation analysis to generate training data for a machine learning analysis.
Here is my CV.
I used to be a software engineer. Some places I have worked:
- MIT. I worked on a web interface to a high performance computing cluster.
- WorldTeach, a volunteer teacher organization. My site was a rural school in northern Namibia.
- Neomar, a small software startup in San Francisco. We made some neat software for Blackberries, but unfortunately the company didn't last.
- The Center for Connected Learning. Formerly at Tufts, CCL has since relocated to Northwestern University. I helped write NetLogo, simulation software for modeling complex phenomena.
Other stuff:
- In August 2005, as part of my work with MIT, I gave a presentation at Apple's Worldwide Developer's Conference (WWDC).
- In January 2005, I gave an IAP talk at MIT on high performance computing in the classroom.
Visiting Eugene? Hungry? Check out my list of favorite local restaurants.
I take a lot of pictures. You can also check out my time-lapse movies of clouds (taken from my old apartment in Cambridge) and melting ice.
Do you use a Mac, Safari browser, and Google Reader? Then you might be interested in my program Reader Helper, which makes the little blue RSS buttons in Safari's address bar (in fact all RSS links in Safari) work properly with Reader.
Do you think that the album ratings on Pitchfork are disproportionately low? This graph I made, showing the distribution of Pitchfork's ratings between 2002 and 2007, suggests otherwise.
This page was last updated on January 30, 2009
Copyright Geoff Hulette, 2005-2008. All Rights Reserved.
