UNIX history made easy
Dan Schlitt
dan at ccnysci.UUCP
Wed Oct 11 03:03:56 AEST 1989
In article <11239 at smoke.BRL.MIL> gwyn at brl.arpa (Doug Gwyn) writes:
-In article <17108 at rpp386.cactus.org> jfh at rpp386.cactus.org (John F. Haugh II) writes:
--In article <1694 at muffin.cme.nbs.gov> libes at cme.nist.gov (Don Libes) writes:
-->Irrelevant. Any computer scientist worth his salt should know every
-->person who has won the Turing Award, and they should have a reasonable
-->understanding of why. I don't care if they have never used UNIX.
-
-The point is, if you don't know who Backus, Dijkstra, Hoare, Knuth,
-Thompson, Wirth, etc. are and what their major accomplishments were,
-you shouldn't advertise yourself as a professional computer scientist.
-
Will it be on the final exam?
I guess 25 years of university level teaching made me into a terrible
cynic. In another article reference was made to physicists and Nobel
prize winners in physics. Don't expect better levels of knowledge
there. You are bound to be disappointed.
The real test is whether the person originally mentioned in this tread
now knows who Thompson is, or did he just dismiss it with a question
from the same family as that above.
--
Dan Schlitt Manager, Science Division Computer Facility
dan at sci.ccny.cuny.edu City College of New York
dan at ccnysci.uucp New York, NY 10031
dan at ccnysci.bitnet (212)690-6868
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