From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Audrey Tang (born April 18, 1981; formerly
known as Autrijus Tang) is a Taiwanese free software programmer, who has been
described as one of the "ten greats of Taiwanese computing."[1]
Biography
Tang showed an early interest in computers, beginning to learn
Perl at age 12.[2]
Two years later, Tang dropped out of high school, unable to adapt
to student life.[1]
By the year 2000, at the age of 19, Tang had already held positions
in software companies, and worked in California's Silicon Valley as
an entrepreneur.[2] In
late 2005, she changed both her English and Chinese names from male
to female ones and began to live her life as a woman, citing a need
to "reconcile [her] outward appearance with [her] self-image".[3]
Taiwan's Eastern Television reports that she
has an IQ of 180.[1]
She is a vocal proponent for autodidacticism[4]
and individualist anarchism.[2]
Free
software contributions
Tang is best known for initiating and leading the Pugs project, a joint effort from the
Haskell and Perl communities to implement the Perl 6 language;[5] she has
also made contributions to internationalization
and localization efforts for several Free Software
programs, including SVK, Request Tracker
(for which she also wrote a large portion of the code) and Slash, as well as heading Traditional Chinese translation efforts for
various Open Source-related books.[1][2]
On CPAN, Tang initiated over
100 Perl projects between June 2001 and July 2006, including the
popular Perl Archive Toolkit (PAR), a
cross-platform packaging and deployment tool for Perl 5.[6] She is
also responsible for setting up smoke test and digital
signature systems for CPAN.[7] In
October 2005, she was a speaker at O'Reilly Media's European Open Source
Convention in Amsterdam.[8]
Publications
- Aker, Brian; Krieger, David; Chen
Wei-hung, Chang Chih-jung, Huang Chun-ying, Lin Chih-pin, Lin
Ke-huan, Liu Kang-min, Tang Chung-han, Weng Chien-ting
(translators) (November 2003) (in Chinese). 架設 Slash 社群網站 (Running
Weblogs with Slash). Taipei, Taiwan: O'Reilly Media. ISBN
986-7794-22-2. http://www.oreilly.com.tw/product_web.php?id=a133.
References
External
links
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