Rethinking the Computer at 80 – NYTimes.com #PGN # MUST READ FOR ALL SECURITY GEEKS /ht @fanf

MENLO PARK, Calif. — Many people cite Albert Einstein’s aphorism “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler.” Only a handful, however, have had the opportunity to discuss the concept with the physicist over breakfast.

One of those is Peter G. Neumann, now an 80-year-old computer scientist at SRI International, a pioneering engineering research laboratory here.

via Rethinking the Computer at 80 – NYTimes.com.

If you don’t know who Peter Neumann is then you should learn. I’ve had the pleasure of meeting him twice and he’s a a stupendous and well-integrated brain.

And if you don’t know what RISKS-Digest is – and why it’s uppercase – then you should look into that, too.

If nothing else, read the above article, young geeks, and strive to meet this person.

Also he is the source through which I first head the unexpurgated versions of several Tom Lehrer songs, via the good graces of alcohol, USENIX and Dr Steven Bellovin, q.v.

That was a memorable evening. Apparently Lehrer was Neumann’s roomie at Harvard, or similar.

Keep an eye on Cambridge.

Comments

4 responses to “Rethinking the Computer at 80 – NYTimes.com #PGN # MUST READ FOR ALL SECURITY GEEKS /ht @fanf”

  1. Markus Zellner

    where does one find the unexpurgated versions of Tom Lehrer songs ? I have always wondered what was blanked out of the song ‘My Home Town’.

  2. I’ve been reading RISKS since 1987, but I have no idea why it is in uppercase.

  3. Stephen Smoogen

    …. encryption code that ensures that it is one that the system trusts. If the data or program’s papers are not in order, the computer won’t process them.

    About the time I was using the Crack program to get an idea about how bad our passwords were.. I wrote a paper as a lark called Burac’s Z… [a paper supposedly written by Dr Burac on his Z language and OS.] It used a universal machine that not would only run continually signed code but would have to ask a central authority if the keys to run the code was allowed. It was meant as a joke because it used the next stage after object oriented languages triplicate form based languages. However various parts have shown up later over and over again… (or before in less satirical forms.)

    Thanks for the blog post. I did not know Dr Neumann or RISKS was still around. Now I have a large amount of back reading to do.

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