Entries in My personal history (41)
When we bought our house in 1998, our back yard came with what I would call an old metal dog fence; a sturdy, unsightly, somewhat rusted, waist-high construct of woven wire rectangles stretched between metal posts. Our yard is large and the fence ran down both sides and across the back. It was overgrown with ivy and weeds and leaned dramatically in places. The metal posts were topped by metal ball and sunk in concrete at the bottom.

Perspective and the relevance of a old job today
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For about two decades now, I have sought to locate myself somewhere in the intersection between computers and politics. In my early twenties, I worked as a programmer for a series of political technology enterprises. Now that I am running a firm in the same niche, I think about the change in perspective that has taken place as I have gotten older and moved from employee to employer.
My first computer was an Apple ][ Plus. I still have that machine. Its arrival in my house was almost a religious experience. We never had gadgets, and it was clear that this was something new, amazing. I stayed up all night the day it arrived, learning about it, spellbound.
In the summer of 1985 I knocked on the doors of more than 70 houses a day, canvassing for COPIRG, the Colorado Public Interest Research Group. I learned a lot about people and neighborhoods and political persuasion.
Today’s posting is triggered by another piece of memorabilia: a flyer for an organizational meeting of "Yale Students with Hart" for April 15, 1987. A friend and I had printed on the flyer: "Learn more about Senator Hart’s positions, and how you can help around the country this summer, next fall, and in 1988."
My First Paid Programming Project, 1984
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I continue to go through old papers and was amused to find another item that represents a very modest milestone in my circuitous path to small software company owner. I have next to me a handwritten contract from 1/13/84, which I think was the first time I was paid for a computer-programming project.
When I found my college transcript last week, I was reminded that three of the courses that I took as an undergraduate have particularly influenced me. I have written about the other two in previous posts. The third was a class that I took with Professor Edward Tufte – it was called Statistics and Data Analysis for Public Policy.
Though I majored in computer science, and took very little political science in college, I got very involved in a few projects for undergraduate courses in American Politics.
Campaigns May Wield Redistricting Tools, Revisited
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NGP Software stands for National Geographical and Political Software, and emphatically not, as some have charged, for my initials (Nathaniel G. Pearlman). Occasionally I am asked where the “Geographical” part of the company’s name comes from, since it seems to be the least emphasized part.
This morning I continued the nostalgic task of organizing old papers and came across my Yale college transcript in a red folder labeled “Me.” The transcript is diagonally stamped “RELEASED TO STUDENT” in large block letters.
Exhortations
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I incorporated NGP Software on January 15th 1997, after giving up on a search for a whimsical or clever corporate name for a new Democratic political campaign software firm. I started by loaning $10000 to the newly formed entity, wondering how long I could go without a paycheck, happy not to be working for anyone else.