Computer Pioneer Bob Bemer Dies
tpconcannon writes "Bob Bemer, the man who helped introduce the backslash as well as the escape key to computing, has passed away at his home at the age of 78. He also helped develop ASCII during the 60's at IBM. More interesting is that he predicted the Y2K bug all the way back in 1971!"
And I posted this yesterday.
His website is here. There are a lot of interesting tidbits on his history page.
www.bobbemer.com (official website)
And the google cache for the impending slashdotting
Among the more interesting tidbits is that he coined the word COBOL
bash: rtfm: command not found
The Y2K bug was NOT a hoax. It was a valid problem that was (for the most part) solved in time. Big difference.
How many developing countries use computers? Sure a lot of embedded stuff didn't fail, but they weren't programmed to fail either, a microwave doesn't need to know the correct date. In more advanced countries, with vulnerable systems, we exported the patched code, to software we developed, that's why they didn't have to spend so much money on it. Yeah, it was hyped. But a lot of the ensuing nothing was caused by corrections we made.
And still most people don't realize that the counter from epoch date (Jan 1. 1970) has a roll over flaw too. Seems to me 2038 is the magic year... but I have poor memory recall... I'm sure my recall will be even worse by then...
~8^]
''Don't drop the first two digits. The program may well fail from ambiguity in the Year 2000.''
He wrote this in his article "Time and the Computer" way back in the 70's.
fifteen jugglers, five believers
If you use BCD, then two digits are only 8 bits. Thus 99 would be 10011001b.
Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
he defined the concept of using a special character to "escape" from one character set to another, and proposed to use the backslash for this (which hadn't existed in character sets until then).
the escape key has nothing to do with this!
thanks, slashdot editors, for misinforming people
//TODO: Think of witty sig statement
No, whoever thought up "CTRL-ALT-DEL" is the bastard.
:-P (credit for it goes to David Bradley of IBM)
Hmm... Why?
It's a perfectly sensible combination since you shouldn't be able to hit the keys accidentally, and are therefore separated from each other.
But you probably blurted it out because you thought it was a Microsoft innovation.
Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!