Nick Christenson at GangOfOne

Nick Christenson was once Senior Technical Consultant/Senior Software Engineer at Sendmail, Inc.. Prior to that, he was Senior Architect at EarthLink Network, Inc.. He has also written book reviews for multiple sources, including Gambing Times Magazine, Poker Player, and 2 + 2 Magazine.

He is the author of the book sendmail Performance Tuning, published 2003 by Addison-Wesley.

He is the lead author, with Russell Fox, of the book Winning Strategies for No-Limit Hold'em, published 2008 by ConJelCo.

He is also the lead author, with Brad Knowles, of the booklet Internet Postmaster: Duties and Responsibilities, published 2006 by SAGE (now LISA)/USENIX.

He has transcribed the out-of-print book The Grammar of Dionysios Thrax, translated by Thomas Davidson. An e-book version in EPUB format is also available.

He has updated and edited Aelian's Various History, originally translated by Thomas Stanley.

He has also written several articles and papers, some of which are listed here:

A list of other, less significant writings are available.

He is also an avid Poker and Blackjack player, and he maintains some gambling information resources.

(Stupid Puce Ribbon 
picture goes here) He also firmly believes in simplicity in Web Page design. His pledge to you is that you will see no huge slow-to-load graphics, no blinking text, and no meaningless animated images anywhere in his space. Maybe the rest of the world has forgotten that the ML in HTML stands for "Markup Language", but he hasn't. As such, he is the founding (only) member of CAUGHT, the Consortium Against Unnecessary Graphics and Hypertext Tags. If you agree, display the Stupid Puce Ribbon on your page with a pointer to the CAUGHT page. On occasion he has been known to write about himself in the 3rd person.

He can be contacted at npc@gangofone.com

This web site is best viewed with ANY web browser, because I'm not trying to do any childish non-standard HTML garbage.

Site Privacy Policy: I look at the logs when I get a chance, so if I can match a person with an IP address, I might know when you've visited. Otherwise, I don't collect any information about anyone.

His PGP public key is:

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This page Copyright Nick Christenson, 1997 - 2017, All Rights Reserved.