Encyclopedia > User:Aidan Elliott-McCrea

  Article Content

User:Aidan Elliott-McCrea

Aidan Elliott-McCrea adores information. And searchable databases. And natural selection. Therefore he really, really approves of Wikipedia.

My particular interests include (but are not limited too):

  1. Evolutionary Biology
  2. Linguistics (though I'm just starting on this)
  3. Several odd regions of Math like:
    1. Number Systems &
    2. Multi-dimensional Geometry (see Polychora for now)
  4. Ancient History
  5. Anthropology, as sort of the blending of 1 and 4
  6. Science Fiction, particularily that with good World-Building[?]
  7. And, should be fairly obvious by this point in the list, I'm a Tolkien-freak.

Most or all of these interests are unified in being outgrowths of my fondness for taking a pattern, and pushing further, just to see what happens.

I've got my own website running a wiki:
http://www.sedesdraconis.com
But it's only using wiki software as an editor interface and information architect, it's not freely collaborative. It's a start on presenting my World-Building[?].

As of 2002.04.29: my website (sedesdraconis (http://www.sedesdraconis.com)) now shows up on google (http://www.google.com) searches! 'S very exciting. For example someone found my page doing a search for comparative charts on infant mortality rates (http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=comparative+charts+on+infant+mortality+rates), for which I happen to be the very top result. Hopefully they weren't too disappointed :)

Lists mostly for my own purposes:

pre-PHP script contributions (minor stuff, all):

plus I started to write a little comment on talk:Dinosaur and got sort of carried away and ended up writing The Brief History of the Mesozoic according to Aidan ;-).

Favorite other users:

Things to do:



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Anna Karenina

... Vestnik ("Russian Messenger"), but Tolstoy clashed with the editor, Mikhail Katkov, over issues that arose in the final installment. Consequently, the novel's firs ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 35.7 ms