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We always need people to help with set up and tear down. We also need people to help us find people that are willing to come give a talk. If you know someone, point them at this page.
We always need people to help with set up and tear down. We also need people to help us find people that are willing to come give a talk. If you know someone, point them at this page.
==The Next Lecture==
==The Next Lecture==
This month's talk is going to be "Anti-Censorship Best Practices for the Sex-Positive Publisher," ([https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=141465195930408 Facebook], [http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/06/28/18683178.php IndyBay], [http://fetlife.com/events/59650 FetLife]) and will be given by Social Justice Technologist and sexuality activist [[User:Maymay|maymay]]. Formerly an open source programmer “by day” and a sexual freedom advocate “by night,” Maymay has been an outspoken member of kinky, queer communities since 2002. Now a full-time activist, writer, and public speaker, he frequently examines cultural and political issues ranging from censorship to community building and beyond on his blog at http://maybemaimed.com. His multi-media seminars employ an interdisciplinary approach that treats sexuality as a lens on the rest of life. Come ready to watch a fast-paced slideshow and then participate in a far-reaching, informal discussion after the seminar.
This months talk is going to be "The Human Body Antenna:  An Electrical Engineering Life Science," and will be given by the fabulous Lauren Palmateer. She is happy to have the opportunity to talk to you about  the frontier science of the life force and vibrational spectrum and its relationship to the electromagnetic waves  and electronics. Lauren received her PhD in Electrical Engineering in Semiconductor Electronics from Cornell University in 1989.  Early in her career she was working on radio receivers at Bell Labs as an assistant to Nobel Laureate Arno Penzias. They were collecting data from the stars using the millimeter wave antennas in New Jersey.   Her experience in high frequency receiver work took her to work in the Observatory of Paris, Chalmers University in Sweden, and IBM Research labs in New York.   At IBM she changed fields of work and was part of the team that developed the first color notebook, the Thinkpad.  Since that time she has worked in Silicon Valley start ups for rear projection TV chips and other LCD and electronic display technologies.
 
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