Note: This page is a mirror of my about/contact page at a href=”https://michaelkupietz.com/?p=9103″>https://michaelkupietz.com/?p=9103, just for consistency with the other slashpages. You should probably just read it there.
Contents:
- It is I: About Mike Kupietz
- Don’t call me, I’ll call you: Mike Kupietz contact info.
- Links to Mike’s other web pages and online presence
It is I!
About Mike Kupietz
A year of this site, my baby, my pride and joy, ranking on page 11 of Google search results for my own name has convinced me it’s time to do a little search engine optimization, so here’s some brief biographical information about artist and technologist Michael Kupietz to tip off the brilliant algorithms out there as to who and white this site just might be about (including awkward third-person references to please Google’s SEO.)
Mike Kupietz is an avid musician, artist, and by day a software engineer, much of which is linked to on my Other Sites section at bottom.
Mike Kupietz: Origins, range, and distinguishing characteristics
I’m an east coast expatriate who somehow, incomprehensibly, has been based for half my life now in San Francisco.
I grew up on Long Island, and attended Very Big State U upstate for two years, where I studied computer science and was a teaching assistant in the electronic music studio, before transferring to Tiny Little Liberal Arts College in the beautiful Hudson Valley, where my heart still resides, where I just barely completed a degree in physics with a concentration in acoustics and an effective minor in playing rock & roll with complete abandon if not much skill.
I’ve been programming computers since I was a kid, and also grew up an artistic dilettante: writing, taking painting lessons, always looking for some sort of self-expression, until at about the age of 15 I started learning music and never looked back.
I primarily play guitar but nowadays can be heard noodling around with varying degrees of skill on my saxophone, big ol’ ancient Wurlitzer electric organ, clarinet, trumpet, accordion, 24-string lyre, everything from a tiny like garkleit to huge tenor recorder, or even occasionally absent-mindedly beating a djembe or twanging away on a little Vietnamese Đàn môi, in addition to a an increasing number of late nights in recent years hunched over my laptop making weird electronic sounds. I love singing as well but typically choose to spare my neighbors that ordeal.
My interests and hobbies are varied but almost always fall somewhere within the triangle of technology, art, and science. I’ve always been an avid, if not particularly talented, photographer as well.
Is this another subheading about Mike Kupietz? It could be!
My taproots on the west coast came about from spending a lot of my ’20s after college on the road. I wound up a long term resident and then employee at the Green Tortoise hostels in Seattle and San Francisco, finally ending up being the entire IT staff of the Green Tortoise Adventure Travel company in SF for a lot of years. From there, my involvement in user groups led to a burgeoning career in IT consulting.
A brief involvement in SF’s counterculture scene fed a lot of interesting adventures for a while. I was involved in efforts to resuscitate the SF Cacophony Society, used to go to Burning Man religiously, and have had some fun experiences with urban exploration. I was webmaster for the Billboard Liberation Front for a few years. I was actually the subject of segment a British documentary once, an episode about “culture jammers” or pranksters, I forget which, of a quickly-cancelled E4 show called “Generation E”, which I would kill to find a video copy of… this film crew had turned up at an event we did and somehow glommed onto me as some sort of organizer figure (I wasn’t, but I was happy to play the part for TV.) I was a citizen journalist for the Occupy movement for a short while as well, and Global Revolution TV nationally carried my from-the-inside streaming broadcast from Occupy SF’s takeover of the Cathedral Hill Hotel—another bit of video history which is, to my knowledge, unfortunately lost forever. Like a lot of things I’ve encountered in SF, these were all things I got heavily involved with, got some great photos or video, but on a personal level had some glaring and uncomfortable differences with a lot of the people I met through them and split pretty quickly. This is why I call myself an “east coast expatriate”. California is a foreign country to me, always will be.
Later on, as my consulting took off and I began to find myself with a little disposable income, I took an interest in finance—not out of wanting to get rich, but out of an interest in the programming challenges of, first, trying to automate a cryptocurrency trading bot, and then trying to automate options trading strategies on the conventional market. (Not that I’d mind if I got rich off them.) I wrote a few crypto tools & utilities that were found useful by a vanishingly small number of people, before I gave up on that casino. I still have an active interest in the complexities of options trading, and still work on refining my trading indicators and algorithms, although I no longer have the funds to actually do it in practice. To this day, I have yet to turn an overall profit as a trader. (Although I am rather proud to once had one of my algorithms tell me to open a huge bear credit spread on TSLA, at the top, shortly before it dropped about 40%.)
So Here We Are
More recently, as the much-hyped AI “revolution” took off, I took an interest in the new generative AI text-to-image tools. I know there’s a lot of controversy about them, mostly, to my mind, because of people not understanding them at all. I feel they’re useful creative tools, like any other, and also like any other, require skill and experience to use well. I think some of the galleries on this site will support that argument. From my teaching assistant days in electronic music, to exploring the possibilities of web art, now to AI generative art, I’ve always been interested in the use of technology as a creative tool, and I suppose a lot of what you’ll see here on Michael Kupietz Arts + Code reflects there. Not exclusively, though—there’s also some good, old-fashioned, ordinary written down stuff (I always hesitate to call it “writing”) and even a pencil drawing.
Since the pandemic, Mike Kupietz, here again awkwardly referring to himself in the third person, has been a homebody. Mike had spent a year or so right before that as a digital nomad, visiting friends and family up and down the east coast, and happened to be back in SF for what was supposed to be a short visit home when the pandemic hit.
I used the time for a lot of personal projects, including starting this site and a lot of the things you see on it. I also finally learned how to solve a Rubik’s Cube, and among my many, many unfinished projects is a book about, not just how to solve it, but about how to understand how the solutions to it work.
Mike Kupietz, writing this page about himself, continues here to say:
Around that time I had some temporary health setbacks—a particularly bad case of long covid that I’m still struggling with the tail end of a year and a half later, plus at the same time a devastating but thankfully short infectious disease I picked up from grabbing a bite to eat in Las Vegas McCarran airport—exacerbated by the fact that around that time, my last big client breached our contract and disappeared, and as of this writing I’ve have been out of work for almost 15 months, giving me a lot to stress about and lose sleep over, and these most recent few months my creative work has mostly been on hold until I can get myself into a situation where I can think straight again instead of spending all day every day freaking out.
Fortunately I can code practically in my sleep, so working on the technical side of this website still gives me a welcome distraction from all that, and I continue to improve it in that way until I’m back in a headspace where the other creative juices are flowing too.
Contact info and links to my other pages and site are down on the, wait for it, Contact section.
I guess that brings us up-to-date. And hope that a certain search engine finally understands that when someone is searching for Mike Kupietz, maybe this site should come up somewhere before page 6 in the results.
Enjoy!
Mike Kupietz
Michael Kupietz ARTS+CODE
July 2024
Contact Info
If you have any questions or concerns, I’m absolutely here to help. To get in touch, come to San Francisco and walk down each street shouting my name.
Here’s a map:
Kidding.
Your best bet to reach me about my creative work or issues about this site is email.
Creative Productions, Arrangements, & Operations in Arts, Technology, and Entertainment
Email: website@michaelkupietz.com (but read the warning below)
Web: https://michaelkupietz.com
Download vCard
If you email me: As an anti-spam measure, you’re going to have to make sure your subject contains “email re website”, or my mail filters will assume you’re a spambot and trash it without me seeing it. Also check back if you write later, because I’ll probably change this contact address periodically and block the old ones.
I’ve got fuller contact info, including a contact phone number, posted on my consulting business site, so if you want to call or text me, you can click through to that.
More Kupietz for you? Links to Mike’s Other Sites & Pages
Music & Sounds:
GuitaristInProgress on YouTube – my old YouTube channel, mostly me playing sloppy covers on guitar. Once upon a time, some people liked this! I actually got fan mail a couple of times.
Michael Kupietz on Bandcamp – My bandcamp page, where my albums will be released if I ever finish them. Nothing there now but some demos.
GuitaristInProgress on SoundCloud – My old soundcloud page, mostly rough demos. Does contain an early excerpt that I’m very fond of of “The Cadaver’s Pavane” from “Five Themes In Uncertain Times“, from all the way back when it was still “Three Themes In Uncertain Times”.
Mike Kupietz on Discogs.com and Michael Kupietz on Musicbrainz: Having put out a digital single on Bandcamp, the music cataloging sites claim I exist. Maybe I’ll release some more stuff officially in ways that other people can make money off of, and they’ll say I exist even more.
Code:
Github: Kupietools – my Github open-source repo for coding projects shared under my own name
Written Down Stuff:
Sloth And Dignity – my infrequently-updated blog, also from whence some of this site’s content came. I’m gradually migrating some of my more serious pieces from there to this site; the more in-the-moment, reflective or confessional pieces will probably stay there, giving, as it is my tendency to write more when I’m moody than when I’m happy, what right this moment looks like a far bleaker view of my life than it actually has been.
Life In A Mikeycosm – my old personal site of occasional writing, drawings, and photos, from whence some of this site’s content came.
Michael Kupietz Arts+Code on Facebook: My facebook page for this site.
Trading and Investing:
My secret other site where I mostly wrote satire about cryptocurrency traders, back when I did that sort of thing. Basically this small project was an outlet for my frustrations dealing with the “true believers” in the crypto world, but it’s got some funny stuff on it, plus some actual info hidden in there.
TradingView: for the finance whizzes among you, a few of my public strategies and indicators for stock and options trading, written in TradingView Pine Script.
General:
This website has an official facebook page at Michael Kupietz Arts+Code official Facebook page.
Oh, yeah, I work, too:
Michael Kupietz, San Francisco FileMaker Consultant – my professional consulting site. Gotta put food on the table somehow. FileMaker Pro development & consulting, MacOS / OS X platform support, web development and Tradingview Pine Script development & support.