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Xeni Jardin

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Xeni Jardin

Xeni Jardin (IPA: ) (born August 5 1972 ) is an American weblogger and journalist.

Jardin is co-editor of the collaborative weblog Boing Boing, contributor to Wired and Wired News, correspondent for the National Public Radio show Day to Day, and television tech news commentator.

Family and early life

Jardin was born in Richmond, Virginia. Her mother, Monica S. Rumsey, and younger brother, Carl M. Hamm, both still live in Richmond . Her father, artist Glenn B. Hamm Jr., died in August 1980 of ALS. Jardin left home at age 14, but remained in school in Richmond .

Formerly known as Xeniflóres Hamm, and Xeniflóres Jardin Hamm, she currently goes by Xeni Jardin. "Xeniflóres" is a Guatemalan name meaning "protector of plants/flowers", and jardin is the French word for "garden."

Career

Prior to becoming a journalist, she was site editor for travel agency Traveltrust , then Supervisor of Enterprise Web Technology for Latham & Watkins before working at Quaartz, an internet calendaring startup .

From 1999 to 2001 she was associated with Jason Calacanis's Silicon Alley Reporter, first as a contributing editor, and later as Vice President of Silicon Alley's parent company, Rising Tide Studios. In 2001, she became a freelance writer for Wired and other magazines. In 2002, she began contributing to Boing Boing after Mark Frauenfelder met her at a party and invited her to be a co-editor .

In 2003, she began contributing the "Xeni Tech" segment for NPR's show Day to Day .

2006 saw Jardin's work appearing on the op-ed page of the New York Times . She was also a guest on the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer to discuss the Washington Post's decision to remove their comments section, a step Boing Boing had also taken .

Jardin is also currently a partner with Mar Doré in Ambience Doré, a southern California furniture dealer.

References

  1. ^ Piccalo, Gina (April 10, 2005). Behold, the wizard of blogs. Los Angeles Times. Piccalo reports that Jardin's father "died a few weeks after Jardin's 10th birthday." Social Security Death Index gives his death as August 1980, which would put Jardin's birthdate at 1970. The same article stated Jardin was 32 prior to her 2005 birthday, which puts her birthdate at 1972.
  2. Turko, Jaime (October 1, 2004). Glenn B. Hamm — A Two-Part Retrospective. via Upcast Gallery, retrieved 30 April 2006
  3. Hamm, Xeniflóres (1997). Traveltrust.com via Internet Archive
  4. Hamm, Xeni Jardin (July 14, 1999). UKNM: That pesky Euro symbol. via chinwag.com
  5. Kirkpatrick, David and Daniel Roth (January 10, 2005). Why There's No Escaping the Blog. Fortune
  6. Breslin, Susannah. Xeni Jardin. via Suicide Girls
  7. Jardin, Xeni. Xeni Tech. Day to Day, NPR. Retrieved May 1, 2006.
  8. Jardin, Xeni (March 9, 2006). Exporting Censorship. New York Times
  9. Lehrer, Jim (January 24, 2006). Post Web Site Silences Public Comments After a Flood of Complaints. NewsHour with Jim Lehrer

External links

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