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Barger is also an expert on ] and ]. At one time he worked at ]'s ] under the influential ], eventually departing over philosophical differences. Barger is also an expert on ] and ]. At one time he worked at ]'s ] under the influential ], eventually departing over philosophical differences.

An active participant in ] during the ], he wrote early ] on ], ], ], and ].

In 1994 he formulated an "Inverse Law of ] Bandwidth": "The more interesting your life becomes, the less you post... and vice versa."


Previously a long-time resident of the ] neighborhood in ], Barger was living in ] as of late ]. An outpouring of concern and speculation occurred in early ] because he had not been seen online for some months, but he had been known to take unexplained absences from the Internet in the past, and this turned out to indeed be the case. Previously a long-time resident of the ] neighborhood in ], Barger was living in ] as of late ]. An outpouring of concern and speculation occurred in early ] because he had not been seen online for some months, but he had been known to take unexplained absences from the Internet in the past, and this turned out to indeed be the case.

Revision as of 18:19, 16 February 2005

Jorn Barger (born 1953 in Yellow Springs, Ohio) is a United States writer, best known on the Internet as editor of Robot Wisdom, an influential early weblog. He coined the term "weblog" to describe the process of "logging the web" as he surfed.

One of the first weblog controversies revolved around his strong anti-Zionist views, which to some crossed over into anti-Semitism.

Barger is also an expert on James Joyce and artificial intelligence. At one time he worked at Northwestern University's Institute for the Learning Sciences under the influential Roger Schank, eventually departing over philosophical differences.

An active participant in Usenet during the 1990s, he wrote early FAQs on ASCII art, Kate Bush, Thomas Pynchon, and James Joyce.

In 1994 he formulated an "Inverse Law of Usenet Bandwidth": "The more interesting your life becomes, the less you post... and vice versa."

Previously a long-time resident of the Rogers Park neighborhood in Chicago, Barger was living in Socorro, New Mexico as of late 2003. An outpouring of concern and speculation occurred in early 2004 because he had not been seen online for some months, but he had been known to take unexplained absences from the Internet in the past, and this turned out to indeed be the case.


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