Tim Scully
Tim Scully was born in United States of America, United States on August 27th, 1944 and is the Criminal. At the age of 80, Tim Scully biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Robert "Tim" Scully (born August 27, 1944) is an American computer engineer best known for his work in the development of LSD from 1966 to 1969, for which he was arrested in 1973 and convicted in 1974.
In 1969, his best-known product, "Orange Sunshine," was considered the highest quality LSD standard.
In the documentary The Sunshine Makers, he was included.
Early life
Scully grew up in Pleasant Hill, which is across the bay from San Francisco. He received an honorable mention in the 1958 Bay Area Science Fair for designing and building a small computer. He spent summers at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory on physics problems during high school. Scully completed a small linear accelerator in the school science lab during his junior year of high school (he was attempting to make gold atoms from mercury), as seen in the Oakland Tribune's 1961 edition. Scully skipped his senior year of high school and moved to Washington, C. Berkeley is a graduate of the University of Berkeley, where mathematics is the focus. Scully took a leave of absence in 1964 because his services as an electronic design consultant were in high demand. He first took LSD on April 15, 1965, just before that time.
Later life
Scully, a lecturer in psychopharmacology and computers, taught a course on psychotechnology and computers at John F. Kennedy University (where he co-taught a course on psychoanalysis and computers) and held a part-time position as an assistant research psychologist in the Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute in San Francisco, San Francisco. Pacific Bionic Systems' founder (reformed as Mendocino Microcomputers in 1980), with Scully continuing as president and chairman) consulting with such diverse organizations as the Esalen Institute and the Children's Television Workshop on database administration and computer games. He has written eight papers on biofeedback research as well as others on scientific computer topics.
He has worked with Autodesk as an AutoCAD expert (1983-1987), consultant (1987-2000), and senior software programmer (2000-2005), and is currently writing a book on LSD's underground history.