SIPB

Perhaps even more so than the web changing my life, a group at MIT called SIPB did. SIPB is essentially a nerd club, even more so than MIT is as a whole. Officially, SIPB is a group that provides computer related services to the MIT community. And that is really what SIPB does, but the means by which is achieves this is probably more important than the end which it achieves.

SIPB stands for the "Student Information Processing Board". It was founded in the late 60's and has been a meeting place for it's particular breed of nerd for a couple decades now. In a lot of ways, SIPB is a social club, like a fraternity. We even have "Sigma Pi Beta" jerseys as a spoof on the ubiquitous MIT frat shirts. By hanging out in SIPB, I learned more about computers and networking and nerds than I did in any of my classes, and I often learned a lot in my classes.

I started hanging around SIPB freshman year and was not really much of a computer geek. My family had an old IBM AT, or maybe it was an XT. I don't really remember, which shows how much I was into it. I had a Commodore 64 when I was younger, and loved that. I wrote a lot of BASIC programs.

Typically spending time in SIPB involved hanging out there for long afternoons asking the older members questions and playing with random stuff, trying to get a program to do something, to learn a new language, or to make something work for the MIT community.