Name: Stas Bekman Email: stas@stason.org URL: http://www.stason.org/ Image: stas-bekman.jpg Summary: Documentation, modules, mod_perl 2.0 contributions, book, articles Stas has started contributing to mod_perl in 1998 by creating the mini mod_perl guide, simply to reduce the rate of broken record questions on the mod_perl list. After a few years, some people still referred to the guide as mini, while it contained more than 600 pages at that time. As of today more than 200 users and developers helped Stas to write, review, improve and polish the guide. While not working on the documentation and developing mod_perl, at the remaining spare time, Stas has written a few Apache modules available from his CPAN directory and did some work on mod_perl 1.0 series. In autumn 2001 Ticket Master has kindly sponsored Stas for one year to help with mod_perl. Stas used this time to help with the development of mod_perl 2.0, to lead the creation of the new perl.apache.org site, to advocate mod_perl via articles in popular online zines and conferences, to help with the mod_perl list and as usual to write a lot of documentation, mainly for mod_perl 2.0. In autumn 2002 Ticket Master has extended the sponsorship for one more year, and the following year has done it again. As Doug MacEachern has shifted his focus on other things at the fall of 2002, Stas took the lead to continue the development of mod_perl 2.0, greatly assisted by Geoffrey Young, Philippe M. Chiasson and other developers. In 2003 Stas had the luxury to be sponsored by Ticket Master for yet another 1.5 years (making it a total of 3.5 years), at the end of which Stas has started the phase out process, opening the opportunity for other developers to take over the lead of the project. Stas has co-authored Practical mod_perl with Eric Cholet, published by O'Reilly and Associates in May 2003. And of course, since 1998, when Stas discovered for himself mod_perl, he was finding ways to use it at work, even while doing x86 hardware development and verification at Intel. He is now thinking about mod_perl 3.0's architecture, hopefully to be implemented solely with AND and OR gates, driven by the Perl 6.0 chipset for the best performance. Don't be surprised when you get offered a shiny Bluetooth PCI card with embedded mod_perl when you shop for your new server machine.