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* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
@ 2019-01-05 14:30 Noel Chiappa
  2019-01-05 15:04 ` Ed Carp
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: Noel Chiappa @ 2019-01-05 14:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: tuhs; +Cc: jnc

   >> From: Doug McIlroy

    >> I have heard also that Isaacson's "Idea Factory" (about Bell Labs)

    > Did you mean the work of this title by Jon Gertner? (I have yet to pull
    > down my copy to see what it says about Unix

I looked, and it too says next to nothing about Unix (which it describes as a
"programming language" - pg. 346). Oh well.

This is really a pretty serious omission, given that the vast majority of
mobile devices now run Android, which is a Unix derivative (Linux). So just
about everyone has a Unix-derived thing in their pocket.

      Noel

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 14:30 [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix Noel Chiappa
@ 2019-01-05 15:04 ` Ed Carp
  2019-01-05 15:26   ` Warner Losh
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: Ed Carp @ 2019-01-05 15:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Noel Chiappa; +Cc: tuhs

> I looked, and it too says next to nothing about Unix (which it describes as a
> "programming language" - pg. 346). Oh well.

Pretty funny, or sad, depending on your viewpoint!

> This is really a pretty serious omission, given that the vast majority of
> mobile devices now run Android, which is a Unix derivative (Linux). So just
> about everyone has a Unix-derived thing in their pocket.

To hear some people talk, everything started with Linux, and Torvalds
is a god. Nonsense.

Even iOS and MacOS are derived from BSD, I believe. I know that MacOS
is (or has been until relatively recently, at any rate) derived from
BSD.

On 1/5/19, Noel Chiappa <jnc@mercury.lcs.mit.edu> wrote:
>    >> From: Doug McIlroy
>
>     >> I have heard also that Isaacson's "Idea Factory" (about Bell Labs)
>
>     > Did you mean the work of this title by Jon Gertner? (I have yet to
> pull
>     > down my copy to see what it says about Unix
>
> I looked, and it too says next to nothing about Unix (which it describes as
> a
> "programming language" - pg. 346). Oh well.
>
> This is really a pretty serious omission, given that the vast majority of
> mobile devices now run Android, which is a Unix derivative (Linux). So just
> about everyone has a Unix-derived thing in their pocket.
>
>       Noel
>

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 15:04 ` Ed Carp
@ 2019-01-05 15:26   ` Warner Losh
  2019-01-05 15:37     ` Ben Greenfield via TUHS
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: Warner Losh @ 2019-01-05 15:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Ed Carp; +Cc: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society, Noel Chiappa

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On Sat, Jan 5, 2019 at 8:04 AM Ed Carp <erc@pobox.com> wrote:

> > I looked, and it too says next to nothing about Unix (which it describes
> as a
> > "programming language" - pg. 346). Oh well.
>
> Pretty funny, or sad, depending on your viewpoint!
>
> > This is really a pretty serious omission, given that the vast majority of
> > mobile devices now run Android, which is a Unix derivative (Linux). So
> just
> > about everyone has a Unix-derived thing in their pocket.
>
> To hear some people talk, everything started with Linux, and Torvalds
> is a god. Nonsense.
>
> Even iOS and MacOS are derived from BSD, I believe. I know that MacOS
> is (or has been until relatively recently, at any rate) derived from
> BSD.
>

MacOS X is derived from BSD + Mach VM, with lots of infusions from BSD and
other projects. iOS is derived from MacOS.

Warner


> On 1/5/19, Noel Chiappa <jnc@mercury.lcs.mit.edu> wrote:
> >    >> From: Doug McIlroy
> >
> >     >> I have heard also that Isaacson's "Idea Factory" (about Bell Labs)
> >
> >     > Did you mean the work of this title by Jon Gertner? (I have yet to
> > pull
> >     > down my copy to see what it says about Unix
> >
> > I looked, and it too says next to nothing about Unix (which it describes
> as
> > a
> > "programming language" - pg. 346). Oh well.
> >
> > This is really a pretty serious omission, given that the vast majority of
> > mobile devices now run Android, which is a Unix derivative (Linux). So
> just
> > about everyone has a Unix-derived thing in their pocket.
> >
> >       Noel
> >
>

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 15:26   ` Warner Losh
@ 2019-01-05 15:37     ` Ben Greenfield via TUHS
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Ben Greenfield via TUHS @ 2019-01-05 15:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society; +Cc: Noel Chiappa

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> On Jan 5, 2019, at 10:26 AM, Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> On Sat, Jan 5, 2019 at 8:04 AM Ed Carp <erc@pobox.com <mailto:erc@pobox.com>> wrote:
> > I looked, and it too says next to nothing about Unix (which it describes as a
> > "programming language" - pg. 346). Oh well.
> 
> Pretty funny, or sad, depending on your viewpoint!
> 
> > This is really a pretty serious omission, given that the vast majority of
> > mobile devices now run Android, which is a Unix derivative (Linux). So just
> > about everyone has a Unix-derived thing in their pocket.
> 
> To hear some people talk, everything started with Linux, and Torvalds
> is a god. Nonsense.
> 
> Even iOS and MacOS are derived from BSD, I believe. I know that MacOS
> is (or has been until relatively recently, at any rate) derived from
> BSD.
> 
> MacOS X is derived from BSD + Mach VM, with lots of infusions from BSD and other projects. iOS is derived from MacOS.

I think that it is more clearly expressed as MacOS X has a BSD interface to the Mach VM. Mach has always had this sort of relationship with BSD and it still exists. 

iOS…

Ben


> 
> Warner
>  
> On 1/5/19, Noel Chiappa <jnc@mercury.lcs.mit.edu <mailto:jnc@mercury.lcs.mit.edu>> wrote:
> >    >> From: Doug McIlroy
> >
> >     >> I have heard also that Isaacson's "Idea Factory" (about Bell Labs)
> >
> >     > Did you mean the work of this title by Jon Gertner? (I have yet to
> > pull
> >     > down my copy to see what it says about Unix
> >
> > I looked, and it too says next to nothing about Unix (which it describes as
> > a
> > "programming language" - pg. 346). Oh well.
> >
> > This is really a pretty serious omission, given that the vast majority of
> > mobile devices now run Android, which is a Unix derivative (Linux). So just
> > about everyone has a Unix-derived thing in their pocket.
> >
> >       Noel
> >


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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-06  4:35 ` Bakul Shah
  2019-01-06  4:52   ` Bakul Shah
@ 2019-01-06  5:00   ` Toby Thain
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Toby Thain @ 2019-01-06  5:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Bakul Shah, tuhs

On 2019-01-05 11:35 PM, Bakul Shah wrote:
>> "Innovators" won general critical praise. A couple of reviews predicted
>> it would become the standard of the field. However, an evidently
>> knowledgeable review in IEEE Annals of the History of Computing faulted
>> it for peddling familiar potted legends without really digging for
>> deeper insight. Regarding Thompson and Ritchie, it looks more like
>> overt suppression.
> 
> Why not ask @WalterIsaacson on twitter. He was chairman & CEO
> of CNN and managing editor of Time among other things so
> presumably he is/was interested in facts.
> 

Dry wit indeed.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-06  4:35 ` Bakul Shah
@ 2019-01-06  4:52   ` Bakul Shah
  2019-01-06  5:00   ` Toby Thain
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Bakul Shah @ 2019-01-06  4:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: tuhs

On Sat, 05 Jan 2019 20:35:49 -0800 Bakul Shah <bakul@bitblocks.com> wrote:
Bakul Shah writes:
> > "Innovators" won general critical praise. A couple of reviews predicted
> > it would become the standard of the field. However, an evidently
> > knowledgeable review in IEEE Annals of the History of Computing faulted
> > it for peddling familiar potted legends without really digging for
> > deeper insight. Regarding Thompson and Ritchie, it looks more like
> > overt suppression.
>
> Why not ask @WalterIsaacson on twitter. He was chairman & CEO
> of CNN and managing editor of Time among other things so
> presumably he is/was interested in facts.

And a professor of history at Tulane. I am sure he is interested
in getting the history right, right?!

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05  2:26 Doug McIlroy
                   ` (2 preceding siblings ...)
  2019-01-05 14:15 ` Paul Winalski
@ 2019-01-06  4:35 ` Bakul Shah
  2019-01-06  4:52   ` Bakul Shah
  2019-01-06  5:00   ` Toby Thain
  3 siblings, 2 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Bakul Shah @ 2019-01-06  4:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: tuhs

> "Innovators" won general critical praise. A couple of reviews predicted
> it would become the standard of the field. However, an evidently
> knowledgeable review in IEEE Annals of the History of Computing faulted
> it for peddling familiar potted legends without really digging for
> deeper insight. Regarding Thompson and Ritchie, it looks more like
> overt suppression.

Why not ask @WalterIsaacson on twitter. He was chairman & CEO
of CNN and managing editor of Time among other things so
presumably he is/was interested in facts.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
       [not found] <mailman.2.1546724053.30035.tuhs@minnie.tuhs.org>
@ 2019-01-06  3:45 ` Paul McJones
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Paul McJones @ 2019-01-06  3:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Winalski; +Cc: tuhs

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> On Jan 5, 2019,Paul Winalski <paul.winalski@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> ...  After Lampson
> left Xerox PARC he set up a similar outfit at Digital'--the Western
> Research Lab (WRL).

Actually, WRL was started by Forest Baskett, formerly of Stanford University. Butler Lampson joined DEC's Systems Research Center (SRC) shortly after it was formed by former PARC manager Bob Taylor.


> ...  I was working in the software tools
> engineering group at the time, and we would have loved to take WRL's
> work and to incorporate it in our products.  But we couldn't.  Why?
> Because they wrote everything in Modula 3, and we were using BLISS.

SRC used Modula-3, and before that a similar language called Modula-2+. Originally, WRL used Modula-2, and then I think switched to C. Perhaps DEC’s engineering groups should also have switched from Bliss to C.


> Yes, PARC invented the modern windows-based GUI, but, as with so many
> PARC innovations, Xerox did nothing with it.  Based on how the PARC
> alumni at WRL behaved at DEC,I would argue that this was the fault of
> PARC as much as of Xerox management.

Xerox built its Star office automation system based on PARC technology and with lots of support from PARC. Star was of course not a big success. PARC also invented laser printers, and Xerox made quite a bit of money from them.


Paul McJones (former Xerox SDD and DEC SRC member — I have been on both sides of the fence)

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* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-06  1:50       ` Chris Hanson
@ 2019-01-06  2:18         ` A. P. Garcia
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: A. P. Garcia @ 2019-01-06  2:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Chris Hanson; +Cc: tuhs

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On Sat, Jan 5, 2019, 8:50 PM Chris Hanson <cmhanson@eschatologist.net wrote:

> On Jan 5, 2019, at 9:01 AM, A. P. Garcia <a.phillip.garcia@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> On Sat, Jan 5, 2019, 10:39 AM Larry McVoy <lm@mcvoy.com wrote:
>
>> +1.  RMS always talked big but the real work was done by other people.
>> GCC was Tiemann at Sun and then at Cygnus, groff was James Clark,
>> etc.  I think RMS hacked on emacs but not much else.
>>
>
> I'm going to refrain from either praising or disparaging the man. I think
> the book Hackers by Steven Levy does a good job of describing him and how
> the idea for the GNU project came about.
>
>
> Dan Weinreb, who was in charge of Symbolics at the time, strongly disputed
> the RMS (and “Hackers”) story of GNU’s inspiration from what Symbolics “did
> to” the AI Lab.
>
> By Weinreb’s account, Symbolics hired relatively few people away from the
> Lab, and  RMS wasn’t simply rewriting Symbolics’ enhancements (which were
> shared with the Lab, and Symbolics’ customers of course) for the MIT and
> LMI environments, he was actually caught copying their code directly.
>

A google search turned up a speech by rms that I hadnˋt previously seen, as
well as Weinrebˋs rebuttal:

https://www.gnu.org/gnu/rms-lisp.en.html

http://ergoemacs.org/misc/Daniel_Weinreb_rebuttal_to_rms.html

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* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 17:01     ` A. P. Garcia
  2019-01-05 20:27       ` Paul Winalski
@ 2019-01-06  1:50       ` Chris Hanson
  2019-01-06  2:18         ` A. P. Garcia
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: Chris Hanson @ 2019-01-06  1:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: A. P. Garcia; +Cc: tuhs

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On Jan 5, 2019, at 9:01 AM, A. P. Garcia <a.phillip.garcia@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> On Sat, Jan 5, 2019, 10:39 AM Larry McVoy <lm@mcvoy.com wrote:
>> +1.  RMS always talked big but the real work was done by other people.
>> GCC was Tiemann at Sun and then at Cygnus, groff was James Clark,
>> etc.  I think RMS hacked on emacs but not much else.
> 
> 
> I'm going to refrain from either praising or disparaging the man. I think the book Hackers by Steven Levy does a good job of describing him and how the idea for the GNU project came about.

Dan Weinreb, who was in charge of Symbolics at the time, strongly disputed the RMS (and “Hackers”) story of GNU’s inspiration from what Symbolics “did to” the AI Lab.

By Weinreb’s account, Symbolics hired relatively few people away from the Lab, and  RMS wasn’t simply rewriting Symbolics’ enhancements (which were shared with the Lab, and Symbolics’ customers of course) for the MIT and LMI environments, he was actually caught copying their code directly.

  — Chris


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* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 15:31   ` Larry McVoy
  2019-01-05 17:01     ` A. P. Garcia
  2019-01-05 17:07     ` Donald ODona
@ 2019-01-06  1:43     ` Chris Hanson
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Chris Hanson @ 2019-01-06  1:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Larry McVoy; +Cc: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society

On Jan 5, 2019, at 7:31 AM, Larry McVoy <lm@mcvoy.com> wrote:
> 
> +1.  RMS always talked big but the real work was done by other people.
> GCC was Tiemann at Sun and then at Cygnus, groff was James Clark,
> etc.  I think RMS hacked on emacs but not much else.

Which I thought was originally derived from Unipress emacs (Gosmacs), and was why old source code used to be hard to find.

  — Chris



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 21:51           ` Rob Pike
@ 2019-01-05 21:53             ` Rob Pike
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Rob Pike @ 2019-01-05 21:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: tuhs

By the way, I felt that "The Idea Factory" did a great job of
communicating the feeling of working at Bell Labs Research and have
recommended it widely. Doug, you might enjoy it.

-rob

On Sun, Jan 6, 2019 at 8:51 AM Rob Pike <robpike@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I heard when "The Idea Factory" came out that Gertner left out the
> computing stuff because he was planning a second book focusing on that
> topic. Of course that might not be true.
>
> -rob

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 21:38         ` A. P. Garcia
  2019-01-05 21:51           ` Rob Pike
@ 2019-01-05 21:52           ` Larry McVoy
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Larry McVoy @ 2019-01-05 21:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: A. P. Garcia; +Cc: tuhs

On Sat, Jan 05, 2019 at 04:38:40PM -0500, A. P. Garcia wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 5, 2019, 3:27 PM Paul Winalski <paul.winalski@gmail.com wrote:
> 
> > On 1/5/19, A. P. Garcia <a.phillip.garcia@gmail.com> wrote:
> > [concerning Richard Stallman]
> > >
> > > Building an operating system in and of itself was not so much his goal as
> > > building the friendships and community surrounding it.
> > >
> > The GNU Hurd kernel certainly seems to have gotten nowhere, and with
> > the success of Linux IMO the free software community doesn't need it
> > anymore.  But FSF certainly has made a big impact and contribution
> > with the gcc toolchain and the free versions of the Unix shell and
> > utilities.
> >
> 
> But RMS sort of invented that community, just like Al Gore sort of invented
> the internet (as we know it today). He was certainly an important catalyst,
> and his views remain influential to many people.

I'll remind you all of a story I'm sure I shared here in the past.  

I was friends with the 3 Cygnus founders and I was having a dinner
with them at Gumby's house.  (This is an aside but it is important:
Gumby was, at that time, married to a very nice German woman named
Silka; she still had a pretty strong accent, English was not her
first language).  

Cygnus was pretty much a 100% GPL / LGPL shop.  So the discussions
were all "RMS this", "RMS that" and went on for a long time (hours).

Silka was clearing the table and she pipes up with "Are you saying
'RMS this'?"  We say yes, and she responds with "Huh, all this time I
heard 'Our mess this', 'Our mess that'".  We all looked at each other
in silence, sort of replaying everying through that view.  And started
laughing (and freaking out a little) that every sentence made sense as
"Our mess <whatever>".

I'm clearly not a fan of RMS, yeah, he did some good but in the process
he took credit for an enormous body of work in which he didn't write a
line of code.  As a programmer, that's lieing and I can't stand liars.

And that's all I have to say on the RMS topic, it's probably too much
as it is.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 21:38         ` A. P. Garcia
@ 2019-01-05 21:51           ` Rob Pike
  2019-01-05 21:53             ` Rob Pike
  2019-01-05 21:52           ` Larry McVoy
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: Rob Pike @ 2019-01-05 21:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: tuhs

I heard when "The Idea Factory" came out that Gertner left out the
computing stuff because he was planning a second book focusing on that
topic. Of course that might not be true.

-rob

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 20:27       ` Paul Winalski
@ 2019-01-05 21:38         ` A. P. Garcia
  2019-01-05 21:51           ` Rob Pike
  2019-01-05 21:52           ` Larry McVoy
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: A. P. Garcia @ 2019-01-05 21:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Winalski; +Cc: tuhs

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On Sat, Jan 5, 2019, 3:27 PM Paul Winalski <paul.winalski@gmail.com wrote:

> On 1/5/19, A. P. Garcia <a.phillip.garcia@gmail.com> wrote:
> [concerning Richard Stallman]
> >
> > Building an operating system in and of itself was not so much his goal as
> > building the friendships and community surrounding it.
> >
> The GNU Hurd kernel certainly seems to have gotten nowhere, and with
> the success of Linux IMO the free software community doesn't need it
> anymore.  But FSF certainly has made a big impact and contribution
> with the gcc toolchain and the free versions of the Unix shell and
> utilities.
>

But RMS sort of invented that community, just like Al Gore sort of invented
the internet (as we know it today). He was certainly an important catalyst,
and his views remain influential to many people.

He was wrong about Unix, though. It is not merely an adequate OS. It is
ideal. ;-)

>

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
@ 2019-01-05 21:34 Doug McIlroy
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Doug McIlroy @ 2019-01-05 21:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: tuhs, jnc

>>I have heard also that Isaacson's "Idea Factory" (about Bell Labs)
> Did you mean the work of this title by Jon Gertner?

Indeed. If should fact-check myself if I'm going to challenge
some one else's choice of facts.

Thanks for the catch,
Doug

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 17:07     ` Donald ODona
@ 2019-01-05 21:20       ` joe mcguckin
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: joe mcguckin @ 2019-01-05 21:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Donald ODona; +Cc: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society

Stig?


Joe McGuckin
ViaNet Communications

joe@via.net
650-207-0372 cell
650-213-1302 office
650-969-2124 fax



> On Jan 5, 2019, at 9:07 AM, Donald ODona <mutiny.mutiny@india.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> At 5 Jan 2019 15:40:13 +0000 (+00:00) from Larry McVoy <lm@mcvoy.com>:
>> +1.  RMS always talked big but the real work was done by other people.
>> GCC was Tiemann at Sun and then at Cygnus, groff was James Clark,
>> etc.  I think RMS hacked on emacs but not much else.
> RMS hired a programmer for emacs already in the 80ths. He also became the maintainer then. It was the dude lucid hired for xemacs. After he skilled jwz at. al. they fired him. Tragical case.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 17:01     ` A. P. Garcia
@ 2019-01-05 20:27       ` Paul Winalski
  2019-01-05 21:38         ` A. P. Garcia
  2019-01-06  1:50       ` Chris Hanson
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: Paul Winalski @ 2019-01-05 20:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: A. P. Garcia; +Cc: tuhs

On 1/5/19, A. P. Garcia <a.phillip.garcia@gmail.com> wrote:
[concerning Richard Stallman]
>
> Building an operating system in and of itself was not so much his goal as
> building the friendships and community surrounding it.
>
The GNU Hurd kernel certainly seems to have gotten nowhere, and with
the success of Linux IMO the free software community doesn't need it
anymore.  But FSF certainly has made a big impact and contribution
with the gcc toolchain and the free versions of the Unix shell and
utilities.

-Paul W.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 15:31   ` Larry McVoy
  2019-01-05 17:01     ` A. P. Garcia
@ 2019-01-05 17:07     ` Donald ODona
  2019-01-05 21:20       ` joe mcguckin
  2019-01-06  1:43     ` Chris Hanson
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: Donald ODona @ 2019-01-05 17:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Larry McVoy, ron; +Cc: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society



At 5 Jan 2019 15:40:13 +0000 (+00:00) from Larry McVoy <lm@mcvoy.com>:
> +1.  RMS always talked big but the real work was done by other people.
> GCC was Tiemann at Sun and then at Cygnus, groff was James Clark,
> etc.  I think RMS hacked on emacs but not much else.
RMS hired a programmer for emacs already in the 80ths. He also became the maintainer then. It was the dude lucid hired for xemacs. After he skilled jwz at. al. they fired him. Tragical case.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 15:31   ` Larry McVoy
@ 2019-01-05 17:01     ` A. P. Garcia
  2019-01-05 20:27       ` Paul Winalski
  2019-01-06  1:50       ` Chris Hanson
  2019-01-05 17:07     ` Donald ODona
  2019-01-06  1:43     ` Chris Hanson
  2 siblings, 2 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: A. P. Garcia @ 2019-01-05 17:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Larry McVoy; +Cc: tuhs

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3069 bytes --]

On Sat, Jan 5, 2019, 10:39 AM Larry McVoy <lm@mcvoy.com wrote:

> +1.  RMS always talked big but the real work was done by other people.
> GCC was Tiemann at Sun and then at Cygnus, groff was James Clark,
> etc.  I think RMS hacked on emacs but not much else.
>

I'm going to refrain from either praising or disparaging the man. I think
the book Hackers by Steven Levy does a good job of describing him and how
the idea for the GNU project came about. I'm going to paraphrase what I
remember from it, but it's been a long time since I read it.

If I recall correctly, stallman graduated summa cum laude with a physics
degree from Harvard. He spent many of his undergrad days and nights working
at the MIT AI lab. Among his character defects, I've never heard anyone
accuse him of being a dumb guy. Awkward, yes, strange, perhaps, but not
dumb.

At the AI lab he found a place where he fit in. The systems ran ITS, an MIT
homegrown operating system. It was an open environment where people debated
technical issues over Chinese take-out, an intellectual society in which
Stallman felt at home as a rightful citizen.

The camaraderie he knew there dissolved as its members struck out to become
entrepreneurs. My memory is fuzzy here, but I believe his main nemesis was
Symbolics, marketers of a proprietary version of MIT's CADR Lisp machine
and operating system. As they released system updates, Stallman would would
reverse engineer the changes and add the new features to the MIT system.

Around the same time, ITS was being replaced on the computers by
proprietary operating systems. Stallman began running into roadblocks, bugs
in the OS where the code was not available to fix. To access the code he
would have to sign an NDA, which he refused to do.

In short, his little utopia collapsed. The lab as he knew it was gone. He
wondered to himself whether he could rebuild it somehow, and this was the
inception of the GNU project. He chose to re-implement Unix, not because he
considered it an ideal operating system but because he considered it
adequate. (I am among those on this list who would beg to differ.) He has
said many times that he does not agree with the Unix philosophy, but I
don't know specifically what he means by this.

Building an operating system in and of itself was not so much his goal as
building the friendships and community surrounding it.



> On Fri, Jan 04, 2019 at 09:35:53PM -0500, Ronald Natalie wrote:
> > Yep, it???s pretty superficial when it comes to looking at where we are
> today.
> > Further, the puppy love over RMS is entirely unjustified.   He was in
> the right place with a rant about the industry but he???s oft unduly
> credited by a lot of the early GNU hangers on like Len Tower who made the
> project a success in spite
> > of RMS.
> >
> > If anybody truly knew RMS they???d not tolerate any of this.   He???s
> the most odiferous, objectionable, sexist, pedophile I have ever met
> (though I???ve not met the President yet).
>
> --
> ---
> Larry McVoy                  lm at mcvoy.com
> http://www.mcvoy.com/lm
>

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05  2:35 ` Ronald Natalie
@ 2019-01-05 15:31   ` Larry McVoy
  2019-01-05 17:01     ` A. P. Garcia
                       ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Larry McVoy @ 2019-01-05 15:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Ronald Natalie; +Cc: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society

+1.  RMS always talked big but the real work was done by other people.
GCC was Tiemann at Sun and then at Cygnus, groff was James Clark,
etc.  I think RMS hacked on emacs but not much else.

On Fri, Jan 04, 2019 at 09:35:53PM -0500, Ronald Natalie wrote:
> Yep, it???s pretty superficial when it comes to looking at where we are today.   
> Further, the puppy love over RMS is entirely unjustified.   He was in the right place with a rant about the industry but he???s oft unduly credited by a lot of the early GNU hangers on like Len Tower who made the project a success in spite
> of RMS. 
> 
> If anybody truly knew RMS they???d not tolerate any of this.   He???s the most odiferous, objectionable, sexist, pedophile I have ever met (though I???ve not met the President yet).

-- 
---
Larry McVoy            	     lm at mcvoy.com             http://www.mcvoy.com/lm 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05 14:15 ` Paul Winalski
@ 2019-01-05 15:01   ` Ed Carp
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Ed Carp @ 2019-01-05 15:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Winalski; +Cc: tuhs, Doug McIlroy

> All that being said, I don't think this argument applies in any way to
> Bell Labs and Unix.  Unix was "applied usefully" long before Stallman
> and Torvalds came along.  Not crediting its inventors is inexcusable.

Completely agree!

On 1/5/19, Paul Winalski <paul.winalski@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 1/4/19, Doug McIlroy <doug@cs.dartmouth.edu> wrote:
>>
>> In the case of Steve Jobs, Isaacson tells not just that the Alto system
>> from Xerox inspired him, but also who its star creators were: Lampson,
>> Thacker and Kay. But then he stomps on them: "Once again, the greatest
>> innovation would come not from the people who created the breakthroughs,
>> but from the people who applied them usefully." While he very describes
>> innovation as a continuum from invention through engineering to
>> marketing,
>> he seems to be more impressed by the later stages.
>
> I would argue that Isaacson does have a point here.  After Lampson
> left Xerox PARC he set up a similar outfit at Digital'--the Western
> Research Lab (WRL).  They did a lot of interesting work in the area of
> software development tools.  I was working in the software tools
> engineering group at the time, and we would have loved to take WRL's
> work and to incorporate it in our products.  But we couldn't.  Why?
> Because they wrote everything in Modula 3, and we were using BLISS.
> It was too expensive and time-consuming to do the translation.  If
> they had worked in BLISS, we could have just taken their code and run
> with it.  From my perspective it looked as though they were
> deliberately setting up barriers to prevent us from sullying their
> research by actually turning it into useful products.
>
> In one memo to DEC's engineering staff, Gordon Bell proposed a "Xerox
> PARC" award to the R&D project that advanced the state-of-the-art the
> most while simultaneously advancing DEC's bottom line the least.
>
> Yes, PARC invented the modern windows-based GUI, but, as with so many
> PARC innovations, Xerox did nothing with it.  Based on how the PARC
> alumni at WRL behaved at DEC,I would argue that this was the fault of
> PARC as much as of Xerox management.
>
> All that being said, I don't think this argument applies in any way to
> Bell Labs and Unix.  Unix was "applied usefully" long before Stallman
> and Torvalds came along.  Not crediting its inventors is inexcusable.
>
> -Paul W.
>

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05  2:26 Doug McIlroy
  2019-01-05  2:35 ` Ronald Natalie
  2019-01-05  9:08 ` William Corcoran
@ 2019-01-05 14:15 ` Paul Winalski
  2019-01-05 15:01   ` Ed Carp
  2019-01-06  4:35 ` Bakul Shah
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: Paul Winalski @ 2019-01-05 14:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Doug McIlroy; +Cc: tuhs

On 1/4/19, Doug McIlroy <doug@cs.dartmouth.edu> wrote:
>
> In the case of Steve Jobs, Isaacson tells not just that the Alto system
> from Xerox inspired him, but also who its star creators were: Lampson,
> Thacker and Kay. But then he stomps on them: "Once again, the greatest
> innovation would come not from the people who created the breakthroughs,
> but from the people who applied them usefully." While he very describes
> innovation as a continuum from invention through engineering to marketing,
> he seems to be more impressed by the later stages.

I would argue that Isaacson does have a point here.  After Lampson
left Xerox PARC he set up a similar outfit at Digital'--the Western
Research Lab (WRL).  They did a lot of interesting work in the area of
software development tools.  I was working in the software tools
engineering group at the time, and we would have loved to take WRL's
work and to incorporate it in our products.  But we couldn't.  Why?
Because they wrote everything in Modula 3, and we were using BLISS.
It was too expensive and time-consuming to do the translation.  If
they had worked in BLISS, we could have just taken their code and run
with it.  From my perspective it looked as though they were
deliberately setting up barriers to prevent us from sullying their
research by actually turning it into useful products.

In one memo to DEC's engineering staff, Gordon Bell proposed a "Xerox
PARC" award to the R&D project that advanced the state-of-the-art the
most while simultaneously advancing DEC's bottom line the least.

Yes, PARC invented the modern windows-based GUI, but, as with so many
PARC innovations, Xerox did nothing with it.  Based on how the PARC
alumni at WRL behaved at DEC,I would argue that this was the fault of
PARC as much as of Xerox management.

All that being said, I don't think this argument applies in any way to
Bell Labs and Unix.  Unix was "applied usefully" long before Stallman
and Torvalds came along.  Not crediting its inventors is inexcusable.

-Paul W.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05  9:08 ` William Corcoran
@ 2019-01-05 12:09   ` Ed Carp
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Ed Carp @ 2019-01-05 12:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: William Corcoran; +Cc: tuhs, Doug McIlroy

Nonsense from someone who evidently had some sort of axe to grind.
Kerninghan, Ritchie, Pine, Thonpson, Joy, and the rest being excluded
is like crediting everything that Sun has done to Scott McNealy.
Sounds like the marketers being credited with innovation.

On 1/5/19, William Corcoran <wlc@jctaylor.com> wrote:
> Okay,  I will say it:  Fake News.
>
> The irony is that UNIX through programs like troff/nroff maintained
> extensive and elaborate mechanisms to support citations.  Indeed, there was
> a time when research required meticulous care of citations.
>
> In fact, I would argue that the importance of the great breakthrough UNIX
> papers by Thompson et al. in combination with the many excellent cites
> within are as significant of a work product as the UNIX proper.
>
> I used to think that the greatest attribute of a digital document was its
> inability to suffer decay, degrade or otherwise fade away like its analog
> analog.
>
> Yet, digital document decay occurs indirectly as we can see here with
> Isaacson’s work product: Revisionism by omission.
>
> It’s as simple as it is dangerous.   Since newer is ALWAYS better, the
> classic texts will eventually disappear replaced by garbage paradoxically
> “filled” with omissions.
>
> Bill Corcoran
> “One small step for main; one giant leap for mainkind.”
>
>
>
>> On Jan 4, 2019, at 9:27 PM, Doug McIlroy <doug@cs.dartmouth.edu> wrote:
>>
>> I was given a copy of Walter Isaacson's "The Innovators: How a Group of
>> Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution". It devotes
>> ten pages to Stallman and Gnu, Torvalds and Linux, even Tannebaum and
>> Minix, but never mentions Thompson and Ritchie. Unix is identified only
>> as a product from Bell Labs from which the others learned something--he
>> doesn't say what. I have heard also that Isaacson's "Idea Factory"
>> (about Bell Labs) barely mentions Unix. Is Isaacson blind, biased,
>> or merely brainwashed?
>>
>> In the case of Steve Jobs, Isaacson tells not just that the Alto system
>> from Xerox inspired him, but also who its star creators were: Lampson,
>> Thacker and Kay. But then he stomps on them: "Once again, the greatest
>> innovation would come not from the people who created the breakthroughs,
>> but from the people who applied them usefully." While he very describes
>> innovation as a continuum from invention through engineering to
>> marketing,
>> he seems to be more impressed by the later stages.
>>
>> Or maybe he just likes to tell stories, and didn't pick up all the
>> good ones about Ken. Isaacson describes spacewar, arguably the first
>> stage of computer-game innovation, at great length. At the same time,
>> all he has to say about early-stage operating systems is a single
>> sentence that credits John McCarthy with leading a time-sharing effort
>> at MIT. (In my recollection, McCarthy proseletized; Corbato led.) He
>> tells how ARPANET, which he says was mainly developed by BB&N, connected
>> time-shared computers, but breathes not a word about Berkeley's work,
>> without which ARPANET would have been an open circuit.
>>
>> "Innovators" won general critical praise. A couple of reviews predicted
>> it would become the standard of the field. However, an evidently
>> knowledgeable review in IEEE Annals of the History of Computing faulted
>> it for peddling familiar potted legends without really digging for
>> deeper insight. Regarding Thompson and Ritchie, it looks more like
>> overt suppression.
>>
>> Doug
>

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05  2:26 Doug McIlroy
  2019-01-05  2:35 ` Ronald Natalie
@ 2019-01-05  9:08 ` William Corcoran
  2019-01-05 12:09   ` Ed Carp
  2019-01-05 14:15 ` Paul Winalski
  2019-01-06  4:35 ` Bakul Shah
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: William Corcoran @ 2019-01-05  9:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Doug McIlroy; +Cc: tuhs

Okay,  I will say it:  Fake News.  

The irony is that UNIX through programs like troff/nroff maintained extensive and elaborate mechanisms to support citations.  Indeed, there was a time when research required meticulous care of citations.   
 
In fact, I would argue that the importance of the great breakthrough UNIX papers by Thompson et al. in combination with the many excellent cites within are as significant of a work product as the UNIX proper.  

I used to think that the greatest attribute of a digital document was its inability to suffer decay, degrade or otherwise fade away like its analog analog.  

Yet, digital document decay occurs indirectly as we can see here with Isaacson’s work product: Revisionism by omission. 

It’s as simple as it is dangerous.   Since newer is ALWAYS better, the classic texts will eventually disappear replaced by garbage paradoxically “filled” with omissions.     

Bill Corcoran 
“One small step for main; one giant leap for mainkind.”   



> On Jan 4, 2019, at 9:27 PM, Doug McIlroy <doug@cs.dartmouth.edu> wrote:
> 
> I was given a copy of Walter Isaacson's "The Innovators: How a Group of
> Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution". It devotes
> ten pages to Stallman and Gnu, Torvalds and Linux, even Tannebaum and
> Minix, but never mentions Thompson and Ritchie. Unix is identified only
> as a product from Bell Labs from which the others learned something--he
> doesn't say what. I have heard also that Isaacson's "Idea Factory"
> (about Bell Labs) barely mentions Unix. Is Isaacson blind, biased,
> or merely brainwashed?
> 
> In the case of Steve Jobs, Isaacson tells not just that the Alto system
> from Xerox inspired him, but also who its star creators were: Lampson,
> Thacker and Kay. But then he stomps on them: "Once again, the greatest
> innovation would come not from the people who created the breakthroughs,
> but from the people who applied them usefully." While he very describes
> innovation as a continuum from invention through engineering to marketing,
> he seems to be more impressed by the later stages.
> 
> Or maybe he just likes to tell stories, and didn't pick up all the
> good ones about Ken. Isaacson describes spacewar, arguably the first
> stage of computer-game innovation, at great length. At the same time,
> all he has to say about early-stage operating systems is a single
> sentence that credits John McCarthy with leading a time-sharing effort
> at MIT. (In my recollection, McCarthy proseletized; Corbato led.) He
> tells how ARPANET, which he says was mainly developed by BB&N, connected
> time-shared computers, but breathes not a word about Berkeley's work,
> without which ARPANET would have been an open circuit.
> 
> "Innovators" won general critical praise. A couple of reviews predicted
> it would become the standard of the field. However, an evidently
> knowledgeable review in IEEE Annals of the History of Computing faulted
> it for peddling familiar potted legends without really digging for
> deeper insight. Regarding Thompson and Ritchie, it looks more like
> overt suppression.
> 
> Doug

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
@ 2019-01-05  4:20 Noel Chiappa
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Noel Chiappa @ 2019-01-05  4:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: tuhs; +Cc: jnc

    From: Doug McIlroy

    > I have heard also that Isaacson's "Idea Factory" (about Bell Labs)

I was unable to find a book of this title by Isaacson? Did you mean the work
of this title by Jon Gertner? (I have yet to pull down my copy to see what it
says about Unix - it's in another room, and I'm lazy... :-)

    > (In my recollection, McCarthy proseletized; Corbato led.)

I think that's an accurate 1-sentence summary.

    > breathes not a word about Berkeley's work, without which ARPANET would
    > have been an open circuit.

Can you elaborate on this point a bit - I'm not sure what it is you're
referring to?

    > A couple of reviews predicted it would become the standard of the
    > field.

Among people who spell 'Internet' with a lower-case 'i', perhaps it will
(sadly).

      Noel

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* Re: [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
  2019-01-05  2:26 Doug McIlroy
@ 2019-01-05  2:35 ` Ronald Natalie
  2019-01-05 15:31   ` Larry McVoy
  2019-01-05  9:08 ` William Corcoran
                   ` (2 subsequent siblings)
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread
From: Ronald Natalie @ 2019-01-05  2:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society

Yep, it’s pretty superficial when it comes to looking at where we are today.   
Further, the puppy love over RMS is entirely unjustified.   He was in the right place with a rant about the industry but he’s oft unduly credited by a lot of the early GNU hangers on like Len Tower who made the project a success in spite
of RMS. 

If anybody truly knew RMS they’d not tolerate any of this.   He’s the most odiferous, objectionable, sexist, pedophile I have ever met (though I’ve not met the President yet).


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

* [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix
@ 2019-01-05  2:26 Doug McIlroy
  2019-01-05  2:35 ` Ronald Natalie
                   ` (3 more replies)
  0 siblings, 4 replies; 28+ messages in thread
From: Doug McIlroy @ 2019-01-05  2:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: tuhs

I was given a copy of Walter Isaacson's "The Innovators: How a Group of
Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution". It devotes
ten pages to Stallman and Gnu, Torvalds and Linux, even Tannebaum and
Minix, but never mentions Thompson and Ritchie. Unix is identified only
as a product from Bell Labs from which the others learned something--he
doesn't say what. I have heard also that Isaacson's "Idea Factory"
(about Bell Labs) barely mentions Unix. Is Isaacson blind, biased,
or merely brainwashed?

In the case of Steve Jobs, Isaacson tells not just that the Alto system
from Xerox inspired him, but also who its star creators were: Lampson,
Thacker and Kay. But then he stomps on them: "Once again, the greatest
innovation would come not from the people who created the breakthroughs,
but from the people who applied them usefully." While he very describes
innovation as a continuum from invention through engineering to marketing,
he seems to be more impressed by the later stages.

Or maybe he just likes to tell stories, and didn't pick up all the
good ones about Ken. Isaacson describes spacewar, arguably the first
stage of computer-game innovation, at great length. At the same time,
all he has to say about early-stage operating systems is a single
sentence that credits John McCarthy with leading a time-sharing effort
at MIT. (In my recollection, McCarthy proseletized; Corbato led.) He
tells how ARPANET, which he says was mainly developed by BB&N, connected
time-shared computers, but breathes not a word about Berkeley's work,
without which ARPANET would have been an open circuit.

"Innovators" won general critical praise. A couple of reviews predicted
it would become the standard of the field. However, an evidently
knowledgeable review in IEEE Annals of the History of Computing faulted
it for peddling familiar potted legends without really digging for
deeper insight. Regarding Thompson and Ritchie, it looks more like
overt suppression.

Doug

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2019-01-06  5:07 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 28+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2019-01-05 14:30 [TUHS] Isaacson v Unix Noel Chiappa
2019-01-05 15:04 ` Ed Carp
2019-01-05 15:26   ` Warner Losh
2019-01-05 15:37     ` Ben Greenfield via TUHS
     [not found] <mailman.2.1546724053.30035.tuhs@minnie.tuhs.org>
2019-01-06  3:45 ` Paul McJones
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2019-01-05 21:34 Doug McIlroy
2019-01-05  4:20 Noel Chiappa
2019-01-05  2:26 Doug McIlroy
2019-01-05  2:35 ` Ronald Natalie
2019-01-05 15:31   ` Larry McVoy
2019-01-05 17:01     ` A. P. Garcia
2019-01-05 20:27       ` Paul Winalski
2019-01-05 21:38         ` A. P. Garcia
2019-01-05 21:51           ` Rob Pike
2019-01-05 21:53             ` Rob Pike
2019-01-05 21:52           ` Larry McVoy
2019-01-06  1:50       ` Chris Hanson
2019-01-06  2:18         ` A. P. Garcia
2019-01-05 17:07     ` Donald ODona
2019-01-05 21:20       ` joe mcguckin
2019-01-06  1:43     ` Chris Hanson
2019-01-05  9:08 ` William Corcoran
2019-01-05 12:09   ` Ed Carp
2019-01-05 14:15 ` Paul Winalski
2019-01-05 15:01   ` Ed Carp
2019-01-06  4:35 ` Bakul Shah
2019-01-06  4:52   ` Bakul Shah
2019-01-06  5:00   ` Toby Thain

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