Since I re-worked my resume and it's been a while since my previous post, I thought that this post might be warranted. There are links to PostScript, PDF, HTML, and ASCII text versions of my resume at http://www.catwhisker.org/~david for folks who might be interested. I tend to be more comfortable providing support for developers, vs. supporting heavy-duty production systems -- in part because I came to sysadmin work from a programming background. The ideal position would also provide or allow me a way to contribute back to the FreeBSD project. I've only been working with FreeBSD since February 1998, but I've worked with UNIX since 1986, and with other types of systems since 1970. I've been involved with a fair variety of systems in that time; the resume has more information on that, and more details are certainly available: I didn't want folks to fall asleep from boredom while reading this note, though. I'm in the San Francisco (California) Bay area (Redwood City; see the LOC record for catwhisker.org for particulars), but quite willing to telecommute and/or travel within reason. I'm quite comfortable using SSH for access to machines (my laptop's keyboard is nearly the only one I use anyway -- and the machine on which this note is being written is not my laptop) and have a static IP address here at home. Thanks for your attention, david -- David H. Wolfskill david@catwhisker.org Evidence of curmudgeonliness: becoming irritated with the usage of the word "speed" in contexts referring to quantification of network performance, as opposed to "bandwidth" or "latency."