

I also do a lot of legal and technical consulting.

I chair the Anti-Spam Research Group in the IRTF, which has published one RFC, which I principally wrote, and is most of the way through publishing another of which I am as RG chair the shepherd. As volunteer president of not-for-profit CAUCE NA, the leading grassroots anti-spam advocacy and education group, I oversee a variety of projects including a new online library of spam related law run jointly with the Cornell Law School. As coprincipal in the not-for-profit Domain Assurance Council, my partner and I ran a variety of projects, one of which produced RFC 5518.

As mayor of my tiny village in upstate New York, I managed a staff of about eight full time and a dozen part time people, coordinating with the department heads and the elected commissioners. I've published the Journal of C Language Translation, a quarterly technical journal, and moderated (in the traditional way, hand approving and lightly editing messages) the pilers usenet group for over 20 years. I've written a bunch of books ranging from the popular "Internet for Dummies" to the technical "Linkers and Loaders." The majority of my books have had multiple authors, with me as lead author coordinating the other authors and dealing with the publisher, with the number of other authors on a book ranging from one to about 20. For people who don't know me, my CV is available as. Levine" Date: J3:48:30 PM EDT To: Subject: Expession of interest for RFC series editor position I would like to be considered for the RFC Series Editor position. The author gratefully acknowledges the support provided by the Oregon Graduate Institute, where he was on sabbatical during the preparation of this paper.From: "John R. The power obtained from the host language is the main emphasis of our presentation. In all of these examples, the host language is Standard ML in the program generating languages, the target language is C+plus. The others are program generators, that is, languages used to specify programs in other languages. The first is a language for specifying simple pictures. We describe several examples of embedded languages. Embedding works particularly well when the host language is a functional language. As a consequence the new language comes equipped with all the features of the host language, with no additional work on the part of the language designer. Embedding is the process of implementing a language by defining functions in an existing “host” Language the host language with these added functions is the new language.
