Borne by email
It is with great
poignancy that it was by email that I got information about an event in the
life of the person who gave me my first real email address just over 20 years
ago.
It was an unusual
friendship that started with my answering a job advert in the Pink Paper for a
role I was not qualified for, nor was I looking for favours, but it launched me
on a very successful career in Information Technology, something I can never ever
be fully grateful for.
Unlike any other
employer, John Coll did
not dismiss my application and my CV by chucking it in the bin, he called me
and proceeding to offer advice.
Knowing John
Then he invested 3
hours of his precious time in knocking my CV into shape, a CV he said appeared
to have everything but said nothing. He was thorough and disciplined like an
old schoolmaster that he was, in just over 3 months I landed my first job
outside the public sector and the rest is history.
John became the man I
could go to when I was suffering a crisis in confidence, a career crossroad or
even issues of life and relationships, he had done it all.
At Connection
Software, his drive and his ideas with his team of amazing young minds led in ground-breaking
mobile software solutions long before the internet was big or mobiles were
everyday products, he just had that foresight.
A little known fact,
he was a pioneer in the personal computer industry having helped write the
functional description of the BBC
Computer and then the BBC Microcomputer User Guide.
BBC Micro people in 2008" by Jem Stone from Chailey
BBC Micro. The people that made it happen.
Licensed under CC BY 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons
BBC Micro. The people that made it happen.
Licensed under CC BY 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons
The man, I knew
As a man, he gave so
many support, opportunity, advice and encouragement, he mentored, he uncled, he
fostered, he befriended, he encouraged, he was a life-long enthusiastic teacher
who always had a great sense of fun.
When I last spoke to
him, he did say he did not have another year left, I listened to how he had
planned for things to continue after he had gone and had planned with my best
friend to pay him a visit one long weekend I was in London.
Alas! That was not to
be, John passed away just two days to Christmas and it was through an email
that I learnt of his passing.
Thank you, John
There is not enough
space for me to express my thankfulness for knowing John Coll, how he like a
big brother always had my back, especially when I was at my lowest point. He
was ready and generous with time and resources even before I asked, he was
there.
I will remember John
the most for his zest for life, his amazing unretiring self that even into his
70s he was a technology buff as good as any, his homeliness and desire to give
others opportunity and vision beyond our limits.
He was forthright and
funny, a great friend, a sure mentor, an example to living life sensibly and
fully, a confidante, a supporter and a fine gentleman. Two years ago, I wrote an email to 6 friends I expected to be my pallbearers, one has gone.
Dear John Coll, thank
you, you’ll be sorely missed and may your honest, gentle, loving and wonderful
soul rest in peace. Goodbye John (1943 -2014).
2 comments:
He was my physics teacher at Keil School back in 1970. I have nothing but good memories of him.
I am sat here typing in one of his programs and decided to google him after I typed in 20 REM JOHN A COLL 30 VERSION 1/ 16 NOV 81.
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