From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hello!

My name is Bryce, I am a software engineer currently living in Chicago. I'm from Vancouver originally and I am American-British-Canadian (so please correct me when I inconsistently use spellings from each of those countries). I have a Bachelors of Science in Honours Computer Science from The University of British Columbia. In the realm of computer science, I focus on performance optimization and low-level programming in general with a lot of my extra time being spent reading about microarchitectural details of processors (mostly those in the x86 family). Outside of work, I have a wide range of hobbies including ballet, figure skating, hiking, skiing, synchronized swimming, photography, and playing the flute. I am most certainly one of those people with a million hobbies that is not actually very good at any of them. As of recently, I am a big fan of Taylor Swift and girl in red having gone to The Eras Tour ( Glendale night 2) and the Doing it Again Tour (Chicago). Prior to that, I've loved The Beatles and The Beach Boys for as long as I can remember.

I've been interested in Wikipedia for a long time. I consider it one of the biggest success stories of the internet. I know it is not without flaws but it seems to work surprisingly well compared to any other online community of its size. I first made some edits when I was still in elementary school under a different username. I made some mistakes that got reverted quickly and then proceeded to spend far too much time reading every Wikipedia policy page that I could so that I would never make those mistakes again. As an adult, I decided that I wanted to start editing again and make useful contributions, especially in some of my more niche areas of interest. I decided to create a new account mostly because I didn't realize that accounts could be renamed but also to get a clean start (which is a legitimate use of an alternate account). My old username can be found in the page history of this page and I have marked the account as retired.

Other than fixing minor grammar errors and adding archived links to citations with broken links as I come across them, my first goal in editing is to make the infoboxes for x86 CPUs as consistent as I reasonably can. There are a lot of issues so I am starting small with just the instruction set. See my talk page for an explanation of my methodology. In looking through the categories, I noticed the page for Replay System which has some inaccuracies and generally seems to indicate that it only existed on the Pentium 4 which is completely false despite some edit summaries seeming rather adamant about it. I am currently rewriting that page in a draft.

Thanks!

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hello!

My name is Bryce, I am a software engineer currently living in Chicago. I'm from Vancouver originally and I am American-British-Canadian (so please correct me when I inconsistently use spellings from each of those countries). I have a Bachelors of Science in Honours Computer Science from The University of British Columbia. In the realm of computer science, I focus on performance optimization and low-level programming in general with a lot of my extra time being spent reading about microarchitectural details of processors (mostly those in the x86 family). Outside of work, I have a wide range of hobbies including ballet, figure skating, hiking, skiing, synchronized swimming, photography, and playing the flute. I am most certainly one of those people with a million hobbies that is not actually very good at any of them. As of recently, I am a big fan of Taylor Swift and girl in red having gone to The Eras Tour ( Glendale night 2) and the Doing it Again Tour (Chicago). Prior to that, I've loved The Beatles and The Beach Boys for as long as I can remember.

I've been interested in Wikipedia for a long time. I consider it one of the biggest success stories of the internet. I know it is not without flaws but it seems to work surprisingly well compared to any other online community of its size. I first made some edits when I was still in elementary school under a different username. I made some mistakes that got reverted quickly and then proceeded to spend far too much time reading every Wikipedia policy page that I could so that I would never make those mistakes again. As an adult, I decided that I wanted to start editing again and make useful contributions, especially in some of my more niche areas of interest. I decided to create a new account mostly because I didn't realize that accounts could be renamed but also to get a clean start (which is a legitimate use of an alternate account). My old username can be found in the page history of this page and I have marked the account as retired.

Other than fixing minor grammar errors and adding archived links to citations with broken links as I come across them, my first goal in editing is to make the infoboxes for x86 CPUs as consistent as I reasonably can. There are a lot of issues so I am starting small with just the instruction set. See my talk page for an explanation of my methodology. In looking through the categories, I noticed the page for Replay System which has some inaccuracies and generally seems to indicate that it only existed on the Pentium 4 which is completely false despite some edit summaries seeming rather adamant about it. I am currently rewriting that page in a draft.

Thanks!


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