Career
He has worked in a variety of roles in print and electronic publishing, including software and website development, as well as for his television and novel work within the Star Trek and X-Men franchises. BiblioBytes was a named plaintiff in Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union, which found the Communications Decency Acting unconstitutional.
Hauman has been a featured speaker at numerous industry trade shows, conventions, organization meetings, and the World Science Fiction Convention.
Among Hauman"s books are the eBooks Star Trek: Starfleet Corps of Engineers: Number Surrender and Star Trek: Starfleet Corps of Engineers: Creative Couplings. Couplings was co-authored with Aaron Rosenberg, and is noteworthy for the first Klingon/Jewish wedding ceremony, for which it was covered on National Public Radio and the Jewish weekly newspaper The Forward.
He also coauthored the "Redemption" story in the Star Trek: New Frontier anthology Number Limits with Lisa Sullivan. Hauman wrote the short stories "On The Air", which appeared in the anthology Ultimate X-Men, and "Chasing Hairy", which appeared in the anthology X-Men Legends.
Both were featured on the Sciences-Fi Channel"s Seeing Ear Theater.
He also contributed to the anthology Urban Nightmares. Hauman is a columnist for ComicMix. He also provided the color art for ComicMix"s online publication of Mike Grell"s Jon Sable, Freelance, which began in November 2007, and was the Assistant Editor on The Original Johnson, a biographical comic book about boxer Jack Johnson.
Hauman is the webmaster of the websites of writers Peter David and Robert Greenberger.
In April 2011, Hauman joined with Peter David, Michael January Friedman, Robert Greenberger, and Aaron Rosenberg in assembling an electronic publishing endeavor called Crazy Eight Press, which would allow them to publish e-books directly to fans. Hauman provided the cover illustration of Peter David"s 2012 vampire novel, Pulling Up Stakes.
Hauman was born in 1969. Hauman attended New York University where he wrote for the student-run comedy magazine, The Plague.
Hauman lives in Weehawken, New Jersey.