Contributors and Acknowledgments xxix tory and is an expert on teaching good manners to computers. He insti- gated this book in 1992 with a call to arms on the UNIX-HATERS mailing list. He’s currently working on Apple’s Dylan development environment. John Klossner, a Cambridge-based cartoonist whose work can be found littering the greater northeastern United States. In his spare time, John enjoys public transportation. Donald Norman, an Apple Fellow at Apple Computer, Inc. and a Profes- sor Emeritus at the University of California, San Diego. He is the author of more than 12 books including The Design of Everyday Things. Dennis Ritchie, Head of the Computing Techniques Research Department at AT&T Bell Laboratories. He and Ken Thompson are considered by many to be the fathers of Unix. In the interest of fairness, we asked Dennis to write our Anti-Foreword. Scott Burson, the author of Zeta C, the first C compiler for the Lisp Machine. These days he makes his living hacking C++ as a consultant in Silicon Valley. Scott wrote most of the chapter on C++. Don Hopkins, a seasoned user interface designer and graphics program- mer. Don received a BSCS degree from the University of Maryland while working as a researcher at the Human Computer Interaction Lab. Don has worked at UniPress Software, Sun Microsystems, the Turing Institute, and Carnegie Mellon University. He ported SimCity to NeWS and X11 for DUX Software. He now works for Kaleida. Don wrote the chapter on the X-Windows Disaster. (To annoy X fanatics, Don specifically asked that we include the hyphen after the letter “X,” as well as the plural on the word “Windows,” in his chapter title.) Mark Lottor, who has actively hated Unix since his first Usenix confer- ence in 1984. Mark was a systems programmer on TOPS-20 systems for eight years, then spent a few years of doing Unix system administration. Frustrated by Unix, he now programs microcontrollers in assembler, where he doesn’t have to worry about operating systems, shells, compilers, or window systems getting in the way of things. Mark wrote the chapter on System Administration. Christopher Maeda, a specialist on operating systems who hopes to have his Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University by the time this book is pub- lished. Christopher wrote most of the chapter on Programming.
xxx Preface Rich Salz is a Principal Software Engineer at the Open Software Foundation, where he works on the Distributed Computing Environment. Rich has been active on the Usenet for many years during his multiyear tenure as moderator of comp.sources.unix he set the defacto standards for Usenet source distribution still in use. He also bears responsibility for InterNetNews, one of the most virulent NNTP implementations of Usenet. More importantly, he was twice elected editor-in-chief of his college newspaper, The Tech, but both times left school rather than serve out his term. Rich wrote the Snoozenet chapter. In producing this book, we have used and frequently incorporated mes- sages from Phil Agre, Greg Anderson, Judy Anderson, Rob Austein, Alan Bawden, Alan Borning, Phil Budne, David Chapman, Pavel Curtis, Mark Friedman, Jim Davis, John R. Dunning, Leonard N. Foner, Simson Garfinkel, Chris Garrigues, Ken Harrenstien, Ian D. Horswill, Bruce Howard, David H. Kaufman, Tom Knight, Robert Krajewski, James Lee Johnson, Jerry Leichter, Jim McDonald, Dave Mankins, Richard Mlynarik, Nick Papadakis, Michael A. Patton, Kent M. Pitman, Jonathan Rees, Stephen E. Robbins, M. Strata Rose, Robert E. Seastrom, Olin Shivers, Patrick Sobalvarro, Christopher Stacy, Stanley’s Tool Works, Steve Strass- mann, Michael Tiemann, Michael Travers, David Vinayak Wallace, David Waitzman, Dan Weinreb, Daniel Weise, John Wroclawski, Gail Zacharias, and Jamie Zawinski. The Unix Barf Bag was inspired by Kurt Schmucker, a world-class C++ hater and designer of the infamous C++ barf bag. Thanks, Kurt. We received advice and support from many people whose words do not appear here, including Beth Rosenberg, Dan Ruby, Alexander Shulgin, Miriam Tucker, David Weise, and Laura Yedwab. Many people read and commented on various drafts of this manuscript. We would especially like to thank Judy Anderson, Phil Agre, Regina C. Brown, Michael Cohen, Michael Ernst, Dave Hitz, Don Hopkins, Reuven Lerner, Dave Mankins, Eric Raymond, Paul Rubin, M. Strata Rose, Cliff Stoll, Len Tower Jr., Michael Travers David Waitzman, and Andy Watson. A special thanks to all of you for making many corrections and sugges- tions, and finding our typos. We would especially like to thank Matthew Wagner at Waterside Produc- tions. Matt immediately gravitated to this book in May 1992. He was still interested more than a year later when Simson took over the project from Daniel. Matt paired us up with Christopher Williams at IDG Programmers Press. Chris signed us up without hesitation, then passed us on to Trudy
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