From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: lm@mcvoy.com (Larry McVoy) Date: Fri, 23 Mar 2018 18:54:36 -0700 Subject: [TUHS] mail tuhs@minnie.tuhs.org In-Reply-To: <201803240126.w2O1QTB5109348@tahoe.cs.Dartmouth.EDU> References: <201803240126.w2O1QTB5109348@tahoe.cs.Dartmouth.EDU> Message-ID: <20180324015436.GQ18044@mcvoy.com> On Fri, Mar 23, 2018 at 09:26:29PM -0400, Doug McIlroy wrote: > [TUHS] long lived programs (was Re: RIP John Backus > > Every year someone takes some young hotshot and points them at some > "impossible" thing and one of them makes it work. I don't see that > changing. > > Case in point. > We hired Tom Killian, a young high-energy physicist disenchanted > with contributing to hundred-author papers. He'd done plenty of > instrument programming, but no operating systems. So, high-energy > as he was, he cooked up an exercise to get his feet wet. > > The result: /proc Didn't Roger Faulkner have something to do with that? Or did he come after? I ask because Roger and I were friends, so I'm always curious about his history. How we became friends is some folklore from Sun, it was when Solaris was a thing so it was SysV based and it had /proc. I had some question about /proc and I heard Roger was the guy, he was pretty much directly under me in building 5, I went down and kind of hung out in his doorway waiting for him to look up. Nothing. 10 minutes later, nothing, he's staring intently at his screen and working, I might as well have been invisible. So I go into his office and sit on his desk. Without looking up he says something like "who the hell are you and what do you want?". "I want to ask you a question" "And why should I answer?" "Because I'm going to sit on your desk and belch and fart until you do" He leaned back, roared with laughter, and we became friends right there. He's left us, I still miss him. Huge nerd, cared deeply about doing the right thing in the code. --lm