Justin Hall

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Justin Hall
Blogging, The Nethernet
WebsiteLinks.net

Justin Hall (born December 16, 1974, in Chicago, Illinois) is an American journalist and entrepreneur, best known as a pioneer blogger.

Biography

Born in Chicago, Hall graduated Francis W. Parker High School in 1993. In 1994, while a student at Swarthmore College, Justin started his web-based diary Justin's Links from the Underground, which offered one of the earliest guided tours of the web.[1] Over time, the site came to focus on Hall's life in intimate detail. In December 2004, The New York Times Magazine referred to him as "the founding father of personal blogging."[2]

In 1994, during a break from college Hall joined

E3 as well as the Tokyo Game Show. He chronicled the first Indie Game Jam in 2002. From late 2001 and 2003, Hall was based in Japan, mostly Tokyo and Akita, authoring a guidebook Just In Tokyo.[5]

In 2007, Hall graduated from the MFA program in the

USC Interactive Media Division. His thesis project was an attempt to make surfing the web into a multiplayer game: PMOG, the Passively Multiplayer Online Game. Hall went on to serve as CEO of GameLayers, which raised $2 million to turn PMOG into The Nethernet, a MMO in a Firefox toolbar.[6] The Nethernet failed to turn a profit, and GameLayers closed down as a company. The server and client software for the Nethernet was released as open source[7] and Hall went on to publish A Story of GameLayers, "open-sourcing our business process".[8]

At present, Hall lives in San Francisco, California. He served as a Producer on ngmoco:)'s Touch Pets series, and then became ngmoco:)'s Director of Culture & Communications.[9] After working for ngmoco:)'s parent company DeNA as a Recruiter, Hall left the company in mid-2013. In 2015 he released a self-produced short documentary Overshare: the Links.net Story exploring his "extremely personal blogging".[10] In September 2017, Hall began work as co-founder & Chief Technology Officer for bud.com, a California benefit corporation delivering recreational cannabis, built on a domain name he registered in 1994.[11]

Selected works

  • Playing a Life Online - an audio recording March 11, 2006 (speech at South by Southwest in Austin, Texas USA)
  • "The Fantasy Life of Coder Boys", April 2003,
    Wired
  • "Where the Geeks Are", August 19, 1999, Rolling Stone
  • "Today's Visions of the Science of Tomorrow", January 4, 2003, New York Times op-ed
  • "Hire This Boy To Play Your Video Games", October 12, 2000, Rolling Stone
  • Just In Tokyo, 2002, Garrett County Press.

Contributor

Films

Further reading

References

  1. ^ Harmanci, Reyhan. "Time to get a life -- pioneer blogger Justin Hall bows out at 31." San Francisco Chronicle. February 20, 2005, retrieved on July 20, 2006.
  2. New York Times Magazine
    .
    December 14, 2004, retrieved on October 31, 2007.
  3. ^ Hall, Justin, "Justin Hall @ HotWired", Justin's Links, retrieved 6 December 2012
  4. ^ Rosenberg, Scott (2009), Say Everything: How Blogging Began, What It's Becoming, and Why It Matters, Crown, retrieved 6 December 2012
  5. , retrieved 16 October 2011
  6. ^ Arrington, Michael (3 February 2008), "Play A Multiplayer Online Game While Surfing The Web: PMOG", TechCrunch, retrieved 23 February 2013
  7. ^ PMOG Open Source, Github, retrieved 6 December 2012
  8. ^ Hall, Justin, "A Story of GameLayers", Justin's Links, retrieved 6 December 2012
  9. ^ Walker, Joseph (November 15, 2011), "For Tech's Elite, Mobile Gaming Is a Big Play", The Wall Street Journal, retrieved 21 February 2013
  10. ^ Wickman, Kase (August 25, 2015), "One Of The First Webloggers Shares 6 Things He's Learned On The Internet", MTV News, retrieved 8 February 2017
  11. ^ Colbert, Mitchell (20 March 2018). "bud.com & the Power of the URL". Cannabis Now. Retrieved 29 October 2019.
  12. IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  13. ^ Blood
  14. IMDb Edit this at Wikidata

External links