I am a thirty year-old student (and more or less researcher) at a respected and prolific University (albeit it is obviously not very known since it is located in a rather inconspicuous country in Europe).
The main disciplines I have studied so far are physics, computer science and music although, since I have been studying nearly everything I could since I was seven years old, I do possess some (relative) insight on many other disciplines, such as mathematics, biology, chemistry, mechanical engineering, martial arts (not combat sports: there is a huge difference), ecology, astronomy, history, philosophy, geology, geophysics, anthropology and religion (although I am somewhere between an atheist and an agnostic, I do understand the significance of religion and made a point of familiarizing myself with this subject).
I made my first contribution to wikipedia at the beggining of 2009 (I think, for it has been a while since I even thought of contributing), although at the time I had not yet created an account on this site. It was a trivial matter on the precision of a mathematical statement that I corrected by changing one sentence and adding another. Apparently my choice of words was not the best and the sentence was slightly changed to improve the clarity of the statement. I hope that I have improved my form of writing significantly since then. I have yet to learn how to correctly introduce information into Wikipedia using more advanced techniques.
I do not expect to make many, or important, contributions to Wikipedia, but I will exercise my mind whenever I drop by on my virtual journeys and see if there is anything worth sharing in my 1400cc brain (give or take a few cubic centimetres). If I happen to find an interesting subject along my studies, I will consider inserting it in Wikipedia.
If you ever get curious about me or have something that you feel you should share with me, feel free to send a message and I'll reply (eventually, depending on whether or not I have been paying attention to my wikipedia account at the time), although there isn't much to see here...
Just remember one thing:
αω=mv
And no, it is not a physic's (nor any other natural science's for that matter) formula: the greek letters have nothing to do with periodic phenomena (among other things) and the roman letters are not synonym for mass and absolute instantaneous velocity, respectively.