motz

turing lecture 2004

held yesterday, open and archived. vint cerf and bob kahn: assessing the internet: lessons learned, strategies for evolution, and future possibilities.

The A.M. Turing Award is often recognized as the "Nobel Prize of Computing", and has been awarded for 39 years; however this is the first year that network researchers have received the Turing Award!!! (brian e carpenter)

brian foote says it all:

to summarize:
Evolution: Tough problem Layering: Honored in the breach Future: Who knows?

and he also quotes "mystical" (at least for me) thomas jay peckish II:

The Turing Award has been called the Nobel Prize in Computer Science, in the same sense, one must presume, that a Daytime Emmy Award could be thought of as a Nobel Prize in Soap Opera.

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revisited

has been a while i went back to dynabook and the idea of personal dynamic media, but don't want to miss this pointer.

What would happen in a world in which everyone had a Dynabook? If such a machine were designed in a way that any owner could mold and channel its power to his own needs, then a new kind of medium would have been created: a metamedium, whose content would be a wide range of already-existing and not-yet-invented media. (1977)

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problem to write but fun to read phistory

jane sammet has written a nice article on the history and future of programming languages (higer level) back in '72 and the problems to write about it adequate.

at that time 172 languages were in use in the states alone. not easy to answer: what are the interrelationships among those hundred of languages that were developed since 1952 (she quotes as the first one the language short code written for univac)

problem to find correct dates.

We--as a profession and an industry--tend to toss around dates without being very specific about what they meanand third, the relationships and descendants of languages. Thus various people would define "the earliest date" for COBOL as 1959, 1960, or 1961, and yet COBOL has one of the clearest and best-documented histories
another problem: definition and variations of a language: is it a dialect or something new. what is something "new"?

what are the reasons that a language becomes widely used?

For example, the psychological issue of snob appeal is more important than many people might think.

71 there was a language called 'gedanken', it has to do with the theory for programming language semantics, developed by d. scott and c. strachey in the 70s; and it was developed by a pipe smoking guy named reynolds.

The recent development of programming languages suggests that the simultaneous achievement of simplicity and generality in language design is a serious unsolved problem. (J.C. Reynolds, 1970)
nato software engineering conference ('68,'69 and the reports)
the present report is concerned with a problem crucial to the use of computers, viz. the so-called software, or programs, developed to control their action. (68)

peter naur the nice thing at that time not even the people who typed the report are mentioned, but also what typwriter they were using and who operated the tape recorder. somehow this tradition should be reinstalled.

H.A.Kinslow (computer systems consultant, has written about time-sharing monitor system,1964): There are two classes of system designers. The first, if given five problems will solve them one at a time. The second will come back and announce that these aren’t the real problems, and will eventually propose a solution to the single problem which underlies the original five. This is the ‘system type’ who is great during the initial stages of a design project. However, you had better get rid of him after the first six months if you want to get a working system. (software engineering 1968, p15)

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