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Connor Freff Cochran Connor Freff Cochran is a creative artist (in multiple fields) and businessman. He began his professional career at 17, shortly after graduating early from high school. On the creative side he has worked professionally as an illustrator, cover artist, essayist, magazine writer, comic book writer and artist, author, screenwriter, graphic designer, BBC television science reporter, musician, composer, songwriter, improvisational comedian, actor, set designer, recording engineer, producer, public speaker, editor, technical consultant, interface designer, photographer, and is a graduate of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Clown College (Class of 1974). Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Clown College (originally located in Venice, Florida, then relocated to Baraboo, Wisconsin and finally Sarasota, Florida) trained around 1,400 clowns in the Ringling style from 1968 to 1997. ...
On the business side he has been a consultant to multiple technology companies, the president of a music tech startup, and is currently president of Connor Cochran, Inc. One CCI subsidiary is Conlan Press, which was founded in 2005 to publish books and audiobooks. Through another CCI subsidiary, Church of Superdog, Connor is business manager for several science fiction/fantasy/comic writers and artists, including Peter S. Beagle, Parke Godwin, Algis Budrys, Peter Gillis, Rebekah Naomi Cox, and the estates of Avram Davidson, Mary Pangborn, and Edgar Pangborn. Other current CCI activities include extensive development in commercial music, theater, collectible art, and feature films. Peter Soyer Beagle (born in 1939) is an American fantasist and author of novels, nonfiction, and screenplays. ...
Parke Godwin is an author, known for his popular reinterpretations of the Robin Hood and King Arthur legends. ...
The Falling Torch (1959) Algis Budrys (born January 9, 1931) is an American science fiction author. ...
Avram Davidson (April 23, 1923 â May 8, 1993) was a writer of fantasy fiction, science fiction, and crime fiction, as well as the author of many unclassifiable but unforgetable stories that do not fit into a genre niche. ...
Edgar Pangborn (February 25, 1909 â February 1, 1976) was an American mystery, historical, and science fiction author. ...
As an illustrator, Connor is best known for his early science fiction work for Galaxy, If, Cosmos, and Isaac Asimov's SF magazines. He also illustrated the novel TITAN by John Varley, and multiple magazine and book appearances of different volumes in Roger Zelazny's AMBER series. Other places his artwork and design have appeared include Keyboard, Frets, Berkley Books, Dell Books, Ace Books, Galaxy, If, Cosmos, Isaac Asimov’s SF, Doubleday Books, Voyetra Technologies, Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Daystar Records, Electronic Games, and Defenders of Wildlife. He was also a Selected Artist on the 1975 NASA/Smithsonian Apollo-Soyuz Artist's Project. John Herbert Varley (born August 9, 1947 in Austin, Texas) is a science fiction author. ...
Roger Joseph Zelazny (May 13, 1937 â June 14, 1995) was an American writer of fantasy and science fiction short stories and novels. ...
From 1984 through 1987 he was a regular correspondent and co-presenter on the BBC-2 computer science television series Micro Live. His 101-essay series on creativity, "Creative Options," ran in KEYBOARD magazine from 1986 through 1999, won a Maggie Award for best regular magazine series, and has been used in several university-level English curricula. The complete original series, plus new material, is scheduled for book publication in 2007. Other magazines he has written for include MacUser, MacGuide, PC, A+, Hardcopy, Enter, Science Digest, InfoWorld, Musician, EQ, Bass Player, Drums & Drumming, Guitar Player, Electronic Musician, Frets, One-Two Testing, Music & Sound Retailer, Making Music, Roland Users Group, Andy Warhol’s Interview, The Record, Music Sound-Output, Science Fiction Digest, Celebrity, Deadly Hands of Kung-Fu, Teen Age, Planet of the Apes, and Comics Interview. His short fiction has been published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Whispers, The Berkley Showcase, Amazing, Isaac Asimov’s SF, and Galaxy. In the comic book world he produced, wrote, penciled, and inked the 1983 independent title D'ARC TANGENT, working with Phil Foglio. He now controls the rights to that property and is pursuing film development on it. He also did work published by DC and Marvel. In the music technology field he has been a consultant to Kurzweil music Systems, Alesis, AKG Acoustics, Opcode Systems, Voyetra Technologies, and Sequential Circuits. As a journalist he covered the launches of Apollo 17, Skylab One, Skylab Three, and Apollo-Soyuz; the Skylab Three crew recovery; and JPL during the Viking landing on Mars, where he got to mix his worlds after hours by taking Carl Sagan (a friend and closet circus buff) to a Ringling Brothers show.
External links BBC Microcomputers Model A, B and B+ • Master range • Archimedes range and A3000 This article is an overview article about the Crown chartered British Broadcasting Corporation formed in 1927. ...
The BBC Micro, affectionately known as the Beeb, was an early home computer. ...
The BBC Micro, affectionately known as the Beeb, was an early home computer. ...
A BBC Master 128 with monitor and disk drives. ...
The Acorn Archimedes was Acorn Computers Ltds first general purpose home computer based on their own 24-bit ARM RISC CPU, and spawned a family of very capable machines with various options. ...
Television Programmes and Services The Computer Programme • Making the Most of the Micro • Micro Live • Telesoftware via Ceefax Logo from The Computer Programme The Computer Programme was a TV series originally broadcast by the BBC (on BBC2) in 1982. ...
Telesoftware was the broadcasting of programs for home computers via Teletext. ...
A BBC Ceefax page from 10 September 1999 Ceefax (phonetic for See Facts) is the BBCs teletext information service. ...
People David Allen • John Coll • Connor Freff Cochran • Chris Curry • Steve Furber • Hermann Hauser • Fred Harris • Lesley Judd • Gill Nevill • Ian McNaught-Davis • Chris Serle • Ian Trackman • Roger/Sophie Wilson There are several people named David Allen or Dave Allen who have articles: David Allen (actor/comedian) - Actor/Writer starting a generational shift in comedy. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Stephen Byram Furber was born in Manchester, England, in 1953. ...
Hermann Maria Hauser, CBE FREng FinstP CPhys (born 23 October 1948), is an entrepreneur born in Vienna, Austria. ...
Fred Harris is a former British comedian and childrens television presenter. ...
Lesley Judd (born 20 December 1946, London, UK) is a British actress and TV presenter best known as a long-serving host of the BBC childrens programme Blue Peter. ...
Ian McNaught-Davis is most recognised nowadays for presenting the BBC TV series The Computer Programme, Making the Most of the Micro and Micro Live in the 1980s. ...
Chris Serle (born July 13, 1943, Bristol, England) is a former BBC TV presenter, reporter and actor. ...
Sophie Wilson, formerly Roger Wilson, is a British computer scientist. ...
Software Acorn MOS • Advanced Disk Filing System • Disk Filing System • BBC BASIC • Doctor Who (BBCSoft) • White Knight (BBCSoft) Acorns Machine Operating System is the computer operating system that powers the Acorn BBC computer range: the BBC Micro (MOS 0. ...
The Advanced Disc Filing System (ADFS) is a computing file system particular to the Acorn computer range, although the Linux kernel does have support for this format. ...
The Disc Filing System (DFS) is a computer filing system developed by Acorn Computers Ltd. ...
BBC BASIC was developed in 1981 as a native programming language for the MOS Technology 6502 based Acorn BBC Micro home/personal computer, mainly by Roger Wilson. ...
Companies Acorn Computers • BBC • Cambridge Systems • Castle Technology • Cumana (manufacturer) • Micro Power • Pace Micro Technology • Solidisk • Superior Software • Torch Computers • Technomatic • Watford Electronics forever . ...
This article is an overview article about the Crown chartered British Broadcasting Corporation formed in 1927. ...
Cambridge Systems Technology (CST) were a company formed in the early 1980s by ex-Torch Computers engineers David Oliver and Martin Baines, to produce peripherals for the BBC Micro, and later, with Graham Priestley, Sinclair QL microcomputers. ...
Castle Technology Ltd. ...
Cumana, based in Guildford, England, was a manufacturer of educational computer products. ...
Micro Power was a British video game publisher established by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in the early 80s. ...
Pace Micro Technology is a British manufacture of set top boxes for digital and analogue satellite television, founded in 1982. ...
Superior Software is a software publisher whose titles are mainly computer and video games. ...
BBC-branded peripherals 6502 Second Processor • IEEE488 Adapter • Prestel Adapter • Teletext Adapter • Z80 Second Processor Misc BBC Domesday Project The BBC Domesday Project was a partnership between Acorn Computers Ltd, Philips, Logica and the BBC to mark the 900th anniversary of the original Domesday Book, an 11th century census of England. ...
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