FACTOID #53: If you thought Antarctica was inhospitable, think again - its land area is only ninety-eight percent ice. Reassuringly, the other 2% is categorised as "barren rock".
Ben Trott and Mena G. Trott (born September 1977) are the married co-founders of Six Apart, creators of Movable Type and TypePad. The company name comes from the fact that they were born six days apart. Six Apart Ltd. ... Movable Type, or MT, is a proprietary weblog publishing system owned by California Corporation Six Apart. ...
Mena is president of Six Apart. She helps lead management and business efforts, and makes the company products aesthetically pleasing and functionally intuitive. She made her first efforts in weblogging at dollarshort.org in 2001. The first use of the term weblog. ...
Ben is chief technical officer of Six Apart. He is a regular contributor to CPAN (the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network), and has written for Perl.com and contributed to Essential Blogging. CPAN is an acronym standing for Comprehensive Perl Archive Network. ... Programming Republic of Perl logo Perl, also Practical Extraction and Report Language (a backronym, see below), is an interpreted procedural programming language designed by Larry Wall. ...
Movable Type was originally developed by Ben during a period of unemployment to help Mena with her blog, but the commercial potential was shown by over 100 downloads during the first hour it was made public.
Both came under heavy criticism in 2004 after moves to charge users to use the popular Movable Type system.
Movable Type was originally developed by Ben during a period of unemployment to help Mena with her blog, but the commercial potential was shown by over 100 downloads during the first hour it was made public.
When 100 people downloaded Movable Type during the first hour of its release in September 2001, the Trotts decided to run their own business from their bedroom, drawing the inspiration for the company name from their nearly identical age -- Ben and Mena were born six days apart in 1977.
But the Trotts -- who at one point only wanted to make enough money to pay their monthly bills -- benefited from being at the right place at the right time.