; -*- Text -*- Name: Donald Edward Hopkins Address: 5819 Ruatan St, Berwyn Heights, MD 20740 Phone: Home: (301) 474-8027, 474-7232 Work: (301) 454-1516, 454-7690, 454-6291 Programming languages: Forth Lisp PostScript C Logo C-Shell LEX/YACC Prolog Pascal Fortran BASIC Pilot Image/Query 6502 assembly 6809 assembly 68000 assembly Z80 assembly Machines / Operating Systems: Apple ][+, //e, //c / DOS 3.3, UCSD Pascal, CP/M, ProDOS, Forth TRS-80 Model I, Level I and II Radio Shack Color Computer Commodore Pet Commodore 64 IBM-PC / MS-DOS IBM-PC/AT / Xenix HP2000 HP3000 / MPE PDP-11/24 / RT-11 PDP-10 / ITS, Tops-10 PDP-20 / Tops-20 VAX 11/750, 11/780, 11/785, 8600 / 4.1BSD 4.2BSD, and 4.3BSD Unix Pyramid / OSx (4.2BSD, System V Unix) Sun Workstation / 4.2BSD Unix Symbolics Lisp Machine Xerox 8010 Workstation / Star, Viewpoint, XDE ZMOB Parallel Processor Schooling: Graduated from Parkdale High School. Currently a Junior at the University of Maryland. Experienced with: Networking: Local area networks, Internet, TCP/IP, electronic mail Emacs: Gnumacs, Maryland, Unipress, ITS, TOPS-20 Window systems: NeWS, X, SunView, LispM, Star, XDE Graphics Interests: Science fiction Art Bicycling Legos Achievments: Participated in American Education Week Activities at Iverson Mall, November 13, 1982. Demonstrated Parkdale High School's Apple computers to people visiting the exhibit for the Business Education program. Some other show at some mall with Owen Science Center with Mike Santangelo and some Commodore Pet computers. Letter of Commendation for outstanding performance on the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test/ National Merit Scholarship Qualifying test in 1982. SAT scores: Verbal: 670, Math 720. PSAT scores: Verbal: 62, Math 61. (97 percentile) Won first place in 1981 Greenbelt Junior High School Science Fair for a project written in Pascal that simulated a mouse's learning process with negative and positive reinforcement. In the county science fair, won honorable mention, and a NOAA/NESS award for mathematics. Won second prize for a tempra painting entered in the Prince George's County Federation of Women's Clubs anual Youth Art Contest, held on March 8, 1980. Was in Boy Scouts of Americs for some time. Was in Explorers for some time. Participated in Adventures in Science program, and on March 21, 1978, gave a presentation at the Gaithersburg Lion's Club on the binary number system, demonstrating an electronic project I had build that displayed numbers in decimal and binary. Member of Phi Eta Sigma. Maryland Functional Reading Test scores (October 1978): Locate references: 96.6, Understand forms: 95.2, Gain information: 100.0, Follow directions: 94.2. Participated in the University of Maryland NCAA Volunteers for Youth program, in wich I got to know an college student athlete as a friend and do things with him. Ranger Rick nature essay contest, 4th place or something. Ages ago. Was invited to see the Voyager pictures of Saturn come in at Goddard Space Flight Center. Was in the Talented and Gifted program in Junior High School and High School. Participated in a program at Goddard Space Flight center for TAG students in which we went once a week or so and learned about geology, astronomy, and other stuff. Was one of the team of four representing the University of Maryland Student Chapter of the ACM that won first place at the 1984 ACM Capitol Regional programming contest at John Hopkins University, and fourth place at the International ACM Scholastic Programming Contest held in New Orleans in March of 1985. We won a trophey, a well equipted Apple Macintosh, a $1000 scholarship from Borland International, and a $300 scholarship from Upsilon Pi Upsilon. Won third place in a preliminary programming contest at the University of Maryland on September 7, 1985, to choose the four members of the team to go on to a contest at Drew University. The other three winners were disqualified because it was found out later that the contest was not open to grad students. Three more people were found, and our team took third place at the Drew University contest, winning a $250 prize from Epson of America, and plaques. Was one of the team of four that won third place at the 1985 Capitol Regional programming contest at William and Mary College on November 2, 1985. Participated in the University of Maryland Mobil Robot Project for three semesters. Work experience: Parkdale High School Attendance Office: Worked as a student assistant, and helped with taking attendance, wrote programs to manipulate the student database on an HP3000 using Image/Query, and helped people with the use of the computer. Computer Challenges: Implemented a Forth programming environment for the Apple computer, including a graphics and animation package. Wrote a promotional graphics demo with it. Designed some computer games that used the package. Stopped working there because they were not paying me as they had promised and refused to promise on paper. Terrapin: Wrote an adventure program in Logo that is now distributed on the utilities disk with Commodore Logo. K.L. Ginter and Associates: Worked on a conversion of the Software Express Videotex interface program, running on the IBM PC, to run on the Apple. It is a communication package that provides a menu-driven window system interface to a central computer over the modem, allowing for file transfer, communication, and other things. Written in Aztec C. Wrote device drivers in 6502 assembly and a uniform interface in C. Stopped work because of bugs in the Apple version of the compiler system that made completion of the project impossible. Unipress: Evaluated and tested Ubiquitous Systems Forth system for Unix. Selfware: Converted Typerite, an program that lets you use your computer like an intelligent electric typewriter, running on the IBM PC, to run on the Apple. Written in Forth. The Apple version runs on top of the Forth system that I wrote. University of Maryland Parallel Processing Lab: Hacked ZMob and tape dumps. Hacking Unix, networking, Sun workstations, systems support, and anything else I have time for.