Computer History Museum: Maurice Wilkes and struggles at DEC
| July 18, 2011 | Posted by Karl Beecher under Off-topic |
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If you’re not familiar with the Computer History Museum, they have a YouTube channel that is a treasure trove of interviews, presentations, documentaries (both contemporary and historical) and many other videos for any computing enthusiast.
One of their latest videos is a tribute to Maurice Wilkes (who died recently) in the form of an interview with one of his colleagues, David Hartley. There are excerpts from Wilkes’s memoirs and personal recollections of Hartley. Some things talked about include:
- Wilkes’s friendship and personal tension with his contemporary Alan Turing.
- The complete freedom granted Wilkes by his university to pursue whatever he wanted, which he used to build the revolutionary EDSAC. Oh, for that level of academic freedom today!
- Being the (co-)discoverer of debugging.
- Footage of Wilkes’s final ever presentation.
I also can’t resist pointing you to this gem called DEC’s PC Challenge. It’s a great corporate video from 1982 following people at DEC as they tried to enter the PC market. At this time, DEC ruled the minicomputer sector, but failed to make much of a dent in personal computers in the 80s. This video, stocked full of –ahem– characters, might explain why.
Great new features in Saros
| July 4, 2011 | Saros |
Another release of Saros was made last Friday (version 11.7.1). We’re pretty pleased with the new features, added as a direct result of user feedback and requests. The first is a partial sharing feature. When sharing a project, you now have the option to choose a subset of files instead of the sending the whole… read more
The Mythical Man-Month Keeps on Giving
| June 20, 2011 | General software engineering |
I’ve recently been re-reading Fred Brooks’s The Mythical Man-Month for something like the fourth or fifth time. It’s one of those textbooks that’s so well-written and a joy to read it becomes a work of literature. It’s also a book that keeps on giving. Every time I read it I seem to get something new… read more
Latest Saros release
| May 25, 2011 | Saros |
After the landmark release of Saros several weeks ago, we have spent a lot of time fixing and improving those new parts of our software based on user feedback. Saros 11.5.6 should now have numerous bumps smoothed out and provide a more slick user experience. Feature-wise, we’ve taken advantage of Eclipse’s own security technology (part… read more
Saros @ ICSE (Again!)
| May 20, 2011 | Research, Saros |
Saros and the Freie Universität Berlin will once again be at the premier venue for software engineering research this year. ICSE 2011 takes place in Hawaii. The organisers are now recognising plug-in development as a legitimate and distinct area of concern in software engineering. If you’re lucky enough to be there yourself, go along to… read more
Don’t take my word for it, ask William Shatner
| May 11, 2011 | Posted by Karl Beecher under Uncategorized |
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I’d love to be able to say that my parents bought me a Commodore Vic-20 (my first computer) on Bill Shatner’s recommendation.
More likely, it was because the guy at the market was flogging them dirt cheap. And so began my obsession…
Also, the Vic was marketed under a different name here in Germany (it was called the VC-20). Whatever was wrong with “Vic” I wonder…
Presenting the New Saros Interface
| April 5, 2011 | Posted by Karl Beecher under Saros |
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The latest version of Saros (11.3.25) is one of the most exciting and important releases in its recent history. Why? The whole interface has been overhauled and redesigned to provide a much more usable layout. Three of Saros’s views (Session, Roster and Chat) have been merged into a single view from which you can manage your collaborations. Click on the screenshot below to see an example.
Eclipse during a Saros session
As a reminder, Saros still has all of the usual awareness information, including:
- Marked files, which users with write-access have open (yellow) or visible (green).
- Current text selected by another user.
- Text changed by another user (by default, the last twenty edits are marked).
- Current view scope of other users (i.e. what portion of a file can they see).
But the changes are concentrated in the Saros view, your main control panel for shared project collaborations.
As you can see, the view is divided into two main areas. The left pane contains the user information: your current username, who is in your current session, and a list of all the buddies you have. On the right is the on-line chat, where you can send messages to everyone in your current session. For existing users of Saros, we have tidied away many of the buttons and options into context menus, accessible when you right-click on a user.
This redesign is accompanied by a batch of other visual overhauls, including the setup and user account wizards. Here’s a sample of configuration wizard; much more informative and friendly, to ensure newbies can keep track of what’s going on.
Saros configuration wizard sample
Along with a whole raft of fixes and UI improvements, this makes the latest release of Saros a must have!
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