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- Jim Lubin was born in Hawaii in 1967 and from the
- very beginning he had a passion for computers --
- well, almost. He got his first one -- an Apple II+
- with 300 baud modem -- at the ripe old age of 14.
-
- He used his modem to log onto local bulletin
- boards and that's all it took. "Once I got
- online," he says with a smile, "I was hooked!"
-
- Not satisfied in a passive role, he started his
- own BBS while still in junior high school. He
- maintained his fledging board for almost a year,
- receiving calls from people all over the country.
-
- When Jim graduated from high school in 1986, he
- graduated to a new computer -- a Laser 128 with a
- 1200 baud modem. He also graduated from small,
- local boards to the heady world of the big
- commercial networks. "I remember reading in my
- computer magazines about this new online service
- called GEnie," he recounts. "It sounded really
- neat and it was cheaper than the other services
- that were available." He joined that spring.
-
- The Hand of Fate
-
- Life threw a nasty curve at Jim at a very young
- age. In May of 1989 he was stricken with a rare
- spinal disorder called Acute Transverse Myelitis.
- He was only 21 years old.
-
- It was touch and go for awhile. He needed to be
- revived several times and was not expected to
- live.
-
- Fortunately, the prognosis was wrong. Jim
- survived, but he was left almost totally
- paralyzed. He underwent six months of intensive
- physical and occupational therapy, and through it
- all he refused to give up hope, refused to admit
- defeat.
-
- He turned to his first love -- computers. "While
- in rehab, I learned morse code to be able to use
- the computer," Jim says. "Because I'm dependent
- on a respirator to breathe, voice input is
- difficult and not very reliable."
-
- He uses a 'sip-and-puff' straw attached to an air
- tube, which controls a pneumatic switch hooked
- into the serial port of his computer. A
- memory-resident program called EZMorse, translates
- the sips and puffs into characters.
-
- The GEnie in the Lamp
-
- When Jim returned home in February, 1990, he
- needed to upgrade to a more powerful computer, but
- the cost was out of reach. So he built his own. "I
- bought the rest of the parts I needed to finish
- the IBM I had been building," he explains
- modestly, "and walked and talked a friend through
- assembling it." He taught himself the fundamentals
- of DOS and was soon back online. Back on GEnie.
-
- He heard of a program that automated navigation on
- GEnie, and found the original shareware version of
- Aladdin in the IBM PC RoundTable. It was still
- hard to get around, but as always, he turned
- obstacle into advantage. "I started writing
- Aladdin scripts to automate some of the features I
- used, to save me some typing," he recalls simply.
-
- He started posting his scripts in the Aladdin
- RoundTable, and soon began writing them for other
- users. It wasn't long before he was noticed.
-
- Aladdin
-
- In March of 1991 Kent Fillmore asked him to write
- a signup script for Aladdin, and Jim agreed. In
- return, he received a temporary free-flag. "I
- thought that was pretty neat!" Jim says with a
- smile. His work grew in popularity. In November of
- '91, David Kozinn invited him to become a beta
- tester for Aladdin, and -- now considered by many
- to be the 'Aladdin script guru' -- made him an
- official member of the support team in March of
- 1992.
-
- Although Jim's account of his activities is quite
- humble, David Kozinn offers praise without
- hesitation. "Jim is one of GEnie's greatest
- assets," David says. "The scripts that he produces
- for PC Aladdin are invaluable in automating the
- parts of the service that Aladdin doesn't already
- do automatically."
-
- Wishes and Dreams
-
- Jim hasn't limited his activities to the Aladdin
- area. He's written scripts for sysops, log-on
- scripts to help users in foreign countries,
- scripts for virtually anything that can be
- scripted.
-
- When asked about his future ambitions, Jim
- responds that it would be nice to be able to
- breathe without the need of a respirator. "Other
- than that," he adds, "just to enjoy life the best
- that I can, learn as much as I can, and continue
- to help others in any way I can."
-
- You can't help but believe his wishes will come
- true.
-