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Why I hate Norm Abrams
Tim Daneliuk wrote:
Well, in fairness, Berzerkely did give us BSD Unix ... sort of ... with the help of the best and brightest from the then Bell Labs crowd. This ultimately gave us TCP/IP and the internet. The irony is that this was funded by ARPA - the research arm of the Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeevil government military technocrats. I wonder how many of the smelly hippies stumbling against the cause of the day realized that their CS department was building a technology infrastructure designed to be survivable (by the military) in the face of nuclear exchange. I used to giggle as I drove past the Berkeley city limits signs that said "A nuclear free zone." to eat lunch on top of a nuclear reactor. The reactor is gone now, replaced by the new CS department building. The giggle on the government is that ARPA funded a network that could survive a nuclear exchange as well as attempts by any government to control it. A minor nit pick is that TCP/IP predated BSD Unix by a few years. BSD Unix certainly helped with TCP/IP domination of computer communication. -- Doug |
Why I hate Norm Abrams
Douglas Johnson wrote:
Tim Daneliuk wrote: Well, in fairness, Berzerkely did give us BSD Unix ... sort of ... with the help of the best and brightest from the then Bell Labs crowd. This ultimately gave us TCP/IP and the internet. The irony is that this was funded by ARPA - the research arm of the Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeevil government military technocrats. I wonder how many of the smelly hippies stumbling against the cause of the day realized that their CS department was building a technology infrastructure designed to be survivable (by the military) in the face of nuclear exchange. I used to giggle as I drove past the Berkeley city limits signs that said "A nuclear free zone." to eat lunch on top of a nuclear reactor. The reactor is gone now, replaced by the new CS department building. Gasp! And you survived? You're not deformed for life? How is this possible? Everyone know that only smelly hippie power is safe ... The giggle on the government is that ARPA funded a network that could survive a nuclear exchange as well as attempts by any government to control it. I dunno about that. I rather think the gummint still has a lot to say about the top level routers, at least in the U.S., or at least they *could* in theory. Certainly, both under Dems and Repubs, they've managed to get data "wiretap" laws installed that allows the gummint to stick its beak in our digital lives. A minor nit pick is that TCP/IP predated BSD Unix by a few years. BSD Unix certainly helped with TCP/IP domination of computer communication. -- Doug Hmmm. I took a course in BSD TCP/IP internals from Mike Karels and Kirk McKusick, both of Berzerkely CSRG fame. Perhaps what Karels did was a first implementation of TCP/IP on Unix, but I'm pretty sure he did of TCP/IP "first" of some kind. Nevertheless, your point is taken... -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tim Daneliuk PGP Key: http://www.tundraware.com/PGP/ |
Why I hate Norm Abrams
On Tue, 25 Aug 2009 16:28:32 -0500, Douglas Johnson
wrote: Tim Daneliuk wrote: Well, in fairness, Berzerkely did give us BSD Unix ... sort of ... with the help of the best and brightest from the then Bell Labs crowd. This ultimately gave us TCP/IP and the internet. The irony is that this was funded by ARPA - the research arm of the Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeevil government military technocrats. I wonder how many of the smelly hippies stumbling against the cause of the day realized that their CS department was building a technology infrastructure designed to be survivable (by the military) in the face of nuclear exchange. I used to giggle as I drove past the Berkeley city limits signs that said "A nuclear free zone." to eat lunch on top of a nuclear reactor. The reactor is gone now, replaced by the new CS department building. The giggle on the government is that ARPA funded a network that could survive a nuclear exchange as well as attempts by any government to control it. A minor nit pick is that TCP/IP predated BSD Unix by a few years. BSD Unix certainly helped with TCP/IP domination of computer communication. -- Doug I worked for Watts Bar nuclear plant back in the 80s. A common saying on the job was........The government pays TVA to build the plant, and pays the NRC to make sure they can't do it. |
Why I hate Norm Abrams
On 2009-08-25, Metspitzer wrote:
I worked for Watts Bar nuclear plant back in the 80s. A common saying on the job was........The government pays TVA to build the plant, and pays the NRC to make sure they can't do it. The thing that scared the crap outta me was an episode on 60 Minutes investigating NRC inspections of powerplant construction, specifically the containment vessels for the nuclear material, the heart of the plant. They interviewed more than one inspector who, years after the fact, admitted to passing sub-standard construction under not so genteel persuasion by shady unions. The ol' "we know where your family lives" kinda thing. No telling how many currently operating plants (do we still have any?) are iffy. A good example of the shaky nuclear power plant industry in this country is Rancho Seco in N CA. The China Syndrome was not bogus science fiction. Funny we should make fun of France, for they have an excellent nuclear energy record and actually export energy to other countries. "Freedom Fries", my ass. nb |
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