Recent

Author Topic: Donald Knuth's Christmas tree lecture, 2022  (Read 890 times)


Thaddy

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 16201
  • Censorship about opinions does not belong here.
Re: Donald Knuth's Christmas tree lecture, 2022
« Reply #1 on: December 27, 2022, 11:04:04 am »
As always, enlightening, even if by a person who dismissed - intial - Pascal!  ;D
If I smell bad code it usually is bad code and that includes my own code.

MarkMLl

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 8045
Re: Donald Knuth's Christmas tree lecture, 2022
« Reply #2 on: December 27, 2022, 12:04:31 pm »
As always, enlightening, even if by a person who dismissed - intial - Pascal!  ;D

:-/ When making a statement like that, one has to consider that there was an enormously complex political situation at Stanford between the head of Department- John McCarthy-, Wirth- who'd recently moved back to Europe- and everybody else- who valued their careers.

MarkMLl
MT+86 & Turbo Pascal v1 on CCP/M-86, multitasking with LAN & graphics in 128Kb.
Logitech, TopSpeed & FTL Modula-2 on bare metal (Z80, '286 protected mode).
Pet hate: people who boast about the size and sophistication of their computer.
GitHub repositories: https://github.com/MarkMLl?tab=repositories

Thaddy

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 16201
  • Censorship about opinions does not belong here.
Re: Donald Knuth's Christmas tree lecture, 2022
« Reply #3 on: December 27, 2022, 12:12:40 pm »
My observation over the years is that people who value their carreer are often - not always - less talented and more conservative, whereas risk takers, that take their carreer - in the sense of employment - less serious tend to be the jewells in the sense of new idea's.
If I smell bad code it usually is bad code and that includes my own code.

MarkMLl

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 8045
Re: Donald Knuth's Christmas tree lecture, 2022
« Reply #4 on: December 27, 2022, 12:20:06 pm »
My observation over the years is that people who value their carreer are often - not always - less talented and more conservative, whereas risk takers, that take their carreer - in the sense of employment - less serious tend to be the jewells in the sense of new idea's.

No doubt. But my feeling is that Wirth wouldn't have resigned from the ALGOL-68 committee- followed by more than a third of the other members- if he'd not found himself actively opposed by his former head of department who already had significant standing in the community. It was, basically, a very ugly situation.

MarkMLl
MT+86 & Turbo Pascal v1 on CCP/M-86, multitasking with LAN & graphics in 128Kb.
Logitech, TopSpeed & FTL Modula-2 on bare metal (Z80, '286 protected mode).
Pet hate: people who boast about the size and sophistication of their computer.
GitHub repositories: https://github.com/MarkMLl?tab=repositories

 

TinyPortal © 2005-2018