Ken Thompson Receives Kanai Award 61
JerseyTom
writes "Ken
Thompson, co-creator of UNIX gets the first
Tsutomu Kanai Award which includes a 20-million yen
grant from Hitachi Ltd. " Silly me, I thought Unix
was obsolete. Guess I was wrong *grin*.
Unix not obsolete, just boring (Score:1)
but rather it evolves slowly over time. new advances usually add
to the knowledge base, not replace it. while calculus was an
extremely valueable addition to mathematics it certainly didn't
supersede algebra or geometry just like object-oriented
programming didn't supersede other philosophies like structural or
functional programming but rather enhanced the general tool set of
computer science. as long as computers remain functionally the same
i don't see why a language such as c would no longer be needed. sure you could
design a new language, but if it was at the same abstraction level as c, ultimately it would need to be able to describe the same tasks that c already does, thus just resulting in a new syntax. programming languages really only differ in abstraction level and support for different design philosophies.
Unix not obsolete, just boring (Score:1)
Alan Turing, inventor of Turing machines or Church that created lambda calculus. They were both 20 th centaurians mathematicans. One example of mathematic from our century: Chaos theory, signal analysis, fractals and not forgetting many of the fundamentals that computers are based on.
I thought Al Gore invented UNIX? (Score:2)
Unix not obsolete, just boring (Score:1)
Unix not obsolete, just boring (Score:1)
Check out the Inferno FAQ [lucent-inferno.com]. You may have to search for "Plan 9" in the text.
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Gasp, Did they say Patents?!?!? (Score:1)
Hey wait a minute... (Score:1)
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Al Gore should be afraid to leave his house. (Score:1)
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Is UNIX obsolete? (Score:1)
Plus I severely, *severely* doubt Steve Jobs would have used anything Apple-derived at NeXT given the circumstances under which it was created.
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Thompson didn't get money! (Score:1)
"The award, endowed with a 20-million yen grant from Hitachi Ltd. in 1995, was established in honor of Dr. Kanai, who joined Hitachi as a researcher in 1958 and retires as president this month."
It's nice that he gets honors like this, and the National Medal of Technology that he and Ritchie will recieve from Clinton next month, but it'd be nice if someone gave him a cash award, too. I'd thought it'd finally happened. Alas.
Gasp, Did they say Patents?!?!? (Score:2)
Graph Theory (Score:1)
What about Graph theory? There are some modern 20th century advances in graph theory..
Wheel, fire not obsolete, just boring (Score:1)
Technology doesn't become obsolete just by aging.
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what? (Score:1)
Gasp, Did they say Patents?!?!? (Score:1)
A/UX (Score:1)
My understanding is that OS/X runs MacOS applications much the same way A/UX did. (That's the "Blue Box", I think.) But that has more to do with hooks built into the MacOS than the Unix side of things.
A/UX was a System V port to Apple's 68K hardware, so it's definately not the same as NextStep/OSX
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How much is 20 million yen? (Score:1)
-lx
Gasp, Did they say Patents?!?!? (Score:1)
According to the article he holds 6 software patents. How dare he! He must be ignorant, according to many slashdotters. The thought that he might want to make a little money off of his good work. He is denying you freedom by creating anything that isn't 'free software', according to RMS. It must be detrimental to society, right?
In all seriousness. For all the talk of innovation in 'free software', I find that it doesn't keep pace with even Bell Labs.
PS: Where is the GPL'd Plan9 equivelent?
Is UNIX obsolete? (Score:1)
Huh? (Score:1)
Unix not obsolete, just boring (Score:1)
The first 2 ideas come straight from Unix. The third idea seems to be a genuine advance, and Linux simply does *not* have it. in fact, to benefit from this third idea, you would probably have to rewrite most of Linux and its apps--it is not just something you can add to Linux-- and it really does seem like a good idea that should be included in all new serious operating systems from now on. especially in a networked environment, it confers a useful kind of flexibility. Plan 9 is not change for changes sake or change for the software-owners sake a la Microsoft and other software vendors. it is an honest attempt to improve the way people use computers.
no sense of irony (Score:1)
Cheddar Cheese
Unix not obsolete, just boring (Score:1)
Do we need a new OS or language every year?
Patent reform is not enough (Score:1)
Huh? (Score:1)
Sure, they went out of their way to make it look more like MacOS 8, but its still largely the same.
No, Bill Gates invented IP forwarding. (Score:1)
What, Windows Terminal Server [microsoft.com] doesn't count? It's multi-user, sort of.
Research before ye speak.... (Score:1)
no sense of irony (Score:1)
AT&T ownned it and couldn't kill it. Microsoft can't kill it. IBM/TransMeta will not kill it.
by daywalker: Al-Gore-rithyms -- priceless
Unix not obsolete, just boring (Score:1)
Unix not obsolete, just boring (Score:1)
At the moment, that OS *is* Linux. AT&T has always diligently protected the trademark UNIX. There was a long and bitter battle between Berkeley and AT&T over the independently derived BSD Un*x. Linux is an independent implementation of the Un*x standard. Because of the trademark and copyrights, you have *BSD and Linux, not UNIX. When that better OS comes along, the good parts will find their way into Linux and into *BSD.
From the introduction of FreeBSD. "For copyright reasons, FreeBSD may not be called UNIX. You be the judge of how much difference this makes."
Linux *has* to insist that Linux is not UNIX.
GNU, GNU's Not Unix. Same thing.
Linux *is* UNIX. You just can't call it UNIX(tm).
>The world is advancing at an alarming rate,
especially in the computer industry.
Right. It's called Windows(tm). It is alarming.
I thought Al Gore invented UNIX? (Score:1)