I have written two books. The first, Hacking Cyberspace, was published in 2001 by Westview Press as part of their Polemics Series. The second, Thinking Otherwise: Philosophy, Communication, Technology, was published by Purdue University Press in April of 2007 as part of their series in Philosophy and Communication.


I have written and published over twenty articles, book reviews, and book chapters in peer-reviewed scholarly journals and anthologies. These texts address a diverse and wide range of subjects--cyberspace, virtual reality, computer law and ethics, machine translation, postmodern philosophy, digital architecture, the Internet, critical theory--and have appeared in venues like Critical Studies in Media Communication, International Studies in Philosophy, Communication Theory, JAC, Configurations, Bosah Ebo's Cyberimperialism, and Jonathan Hill's Architecture: The Subject is Matter.


I have lectured on the philosophical aspects of the Internet, computer technology, the future of books, and critical theory at universities and to professional organization in the United States, Austria, United Kingdom, and Poland. I also have participated in panels and delivered scholarly papers at numerous conventions and conferences like the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (SPEP), the National Communication Association (NCA), the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in America (PIASA), and the International Conference on Virtual Reality and Communcation Ethics.


Because my expertise covers the Internet, cyberspace, and computer technology, I am often interviewed by journalists and reporters for stories in newspapers, periodicals, on-line publications, and film documentaries. My comments have appeared in the Washington Post, the Chicago Tribune, ORF-Science, The Courier News, and Wisconsin Public Radio.