When I was fifteen, sixteen, when I really started to program computing
I definitely wanted to become a programmer
It was almost impossible because the dream was so big
I didn't see any chance because I was living in a little town;
I was studying. And when I finally broke away from school
and became a programmer I thought,
"Well, now I may have a little bit of a chance,"
Because all I really wanted to do is program – and not only programs.
But reproduce programs.
[interstellar funk]
At that time, in Blanes, in '15-'16, they still had computers
So, I would take my computer, would go to my comfortable chair,
programming maybe 300 minutes.
I think I had about seven, eight algorithms.
I would partially sleep in the chair because I didn't want to abstract
and that helped me for about almost two years to survive in the beginning.
[interstellar guitar]
I wanted to do a creation with the time of the past,
the time of the future, of the current time; and then,
have a program of the future. And I said, "Wait a second...
I know the synchronizer – why don't I use the synchronized statement
which is the programming of the future?"
And I didn't have any idea what to do,
but I knew I needed a tack so we put a tick on the BundleContext
which then was synched to the Java Virtual Machine.
I knew that it could be a programming of the future
but I didn't realise how much the expansion would be
My name is TimeListener
[interstellar organ]
Once you free your mind about a concept of
logic, harmony and time being correct,
you can do whatever you want. So, nobody told me what to do,
and there was no preconception of what to do
[interstellar strings]