Our Own Lee Rudolph, was there as well.  In the belly of Net Logo, I think. 

 

Lee???? Are you out there?  

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

 <mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com> thompnicks...@gmail.com

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> On Behalf Of Steven A Smith
Sent: Thursday, December 26, 2019 2:56 PM
To: friam@redfish.com
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] IT is Not Sustainable

 

Frank -

    I am, it's first draft is roughly what I get when I filter my outbox.  The 
chapters on "memoirs of sci/tech" are in the "recipients:Friam" stream... this 
collection may very well also be the primary contents of many's TL;DR folder 
here.

    I would appreciate a second memoir from yourself covering the years (and 
anecdotes) including running Paul Erdos out of the Berkeley Campus Library each 
night and the belly of the ATT and CMU (and???) beasts... to complement the 
not-too-long-after-wild-wild-west days in NM.

    My friend who is no more than a couple of years younger than you who grew 
up in Las Vegas and Amarillo recognized a lot of familiar "color" from your 
memoir.  He got lucky and ended up at MIT in the early 60s... 

- Steve

On 12/26/19 11:30 AM, Frank Wimberly wrote:

Steve, 

 

You should write a memoir.

 

Frank

-----------------------------------
Frank Wimberly

My memoir:
https://www.amazon.com/author/frankwimberly

My scientific publications:
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Frank_Wimberly2

Phone (505) 670-9918

 

On Thu, Dec 26, 2019, 10:42 AM Steven A Smith <sasm...@swcp.com 
<mailto:sasm...@swcp.com> > wrote:

Frank -

It is fascinating to hear that you were in the "belly of the beast" if only for 
a short while.  I suppose we have all been in the belly of *some* beast in our 
various times.

My earliest years were without a telephone in the house (camp-trailer in the 
woods) followed by several party lines (shared in 2 cases amongst other USFS 
families in forest-camp compounds) and understanding that the magical rings and 
voices coming from the handsets in the house were modulated (whatever that 
meant to a 3 year old) over the insulated bundles of wires running from 
tree-to-tree and pole-to-pole...   It wasn't hard to understand the idea that 
if voices could travel over single wires, that any one of us on a party line 
could pick up and hear the other's voices during a conversation or even that 
the volume/static on the line would abruptly change if someone picked up (say 
to listen in?).   It made perfect sense that such resources (wires on poles) 
were very scarce and needed to be shared...   I had heard of operator-assisted 
calling which made great sense (patch panels) but the idea that the pulses sent 
via the spring-loaded rotary dial could "tell" a electromechanical switch (my 
father showed me the one in the main location at the second forest camp when I 
was about 5) and I remember watching/hearing a call go through it... relays 
opening and closing as ring pulses went through...  

One of my friend's father was the local telephone lineman and he was busy all 
the time either going out on trouble calls or doing maintenance on the 
switches.  Realizing that in a community of roughly 300 (600 in the county at 
the time!) was keeping one man busy (more than) full time doing this was my 
first taste of "infrastructure".  I don't know what kind of backup he had... I 
never saw anyone else working with him nor heard of anyone else employed... 
though I do know sometimes there were company trucks parked at the fenced yard 
next to his house... probably for new line buildout?   Another father of a 
friend owned/operated the local "vending" routes which included soda machines, 
candy machines and best of all pinball machines.  HIs territory must have been 
pretty wide because our 300 town only had one soda/candy machine at each of 2 
gasoline stations and 3 pinball machines at the drug/variety store.   I got to 
see the ones in their shop behind the house under repair opened up and really 
got a kick out of trying to "trace the logic" of a coin-drop/lever-pull, 
delivery-chute... and even better, the complex logic of a pinball machine.   
Yet another father drove the propane delivery truck (he had a boss who drove 
some, but he was the main driver) and another who ran the local branch of the 
power - coop  along with his wife.   They had more trucks that came in from the 
next large town (60 miles and maybe 1000 people?) to do major repairs/upgrades, 
but he was out in his truck all the time fixing/installing *something*.  
Several of these men ran an ad-hoc cable network in the core of the village...  
nothing came in by antenna and I guess they had their own up on a mountain with 
a rebroadcast system...   the network was down as much as it was up and while 
*some* of the customers had to have been paying customers, it was these guys 
who somewho cooperatively kept it going.   I *knew* that someone besides these 
men were *designing* and *building* the systems they maintained (thought the 
cable TV thing was more DIY).   

Many years later, we moved to a large town/small-city (2 supermarkets, a dozen 
motels and gas stations?) and our neighbors at the edge of town owned the local 
AM radio station... they solicited me to clean the station every Saturday and 
after a few months of that I graduated to typing up station program logs and 
then began to operate the station under supervision... they were largely 
"automated" which meant 4 big carousels with 4-track endless loop (similar to 
8-track) cartidges that we would load with music, PSAs and commercials which 
were then "programmed" by inserting pins in different patch-panels... there 
were two modes... for example, the system that took over on the top of hour for 
the network news would inject one of a small handful of instrumental tunes that 
could be faded/interrupted at-will to flip over the newsfeed.   The rest of the 
time, the system had a priority stack and the commercial/PSAs stack had 
priority in the sense that it wanted to play out it's queue within the allotted 
time (usually one hour) no matter what... while the music queue would simply 
play whenever one of the others were not... only rarely (due to bad planning) 
would a commercial or PSA go unplayed.   Not every hour was different, but 
there were periods (8-12AM, 1-5PM, 6-10PM) that had a particular character and 
there was some variation within it.   By the time I was 15 (Freshman in HS) the 
station owners saw my diligence and curiosity (the Station Engineer would take 
the time to explain most everything there to me in as much detail as I had time 
for) and offered me a nighttime live show which I ran for most of my HS years.  
I always had the option to fire up the automated system, as I was also trying 
to do my homework during that time.   I went in to the station before 4PM to 
handle the 4-6 news programs (I can still hear Paul Harvey ringing in my ears) 
and then the (automated) 6-7 PM "sundown serenade" curated by the wife but 
executed by me (most of the time).   At 7 we rolled into "the Night Show" which 
was conceived by the owners to be something for the "youth crowd".  It was 
nominally a Rock show but was really Top-40 by their measure...  We had the 
full array of classic rock vinyl in the shelves and I was allowed to use (most 
of) it but there was the top-40 billboard charts to be serviced which meant a 
lot of pop-rock and country-rock and pop-pop.  

Yet another exposure to the complexities of "programming" and "logic" from a 
somewhat different perspective.   The engineer at the time had been on the 
predecessor to the NIF fusion project in Livermore (MFE?) (designing/building 
the capacitor banks) and clued me in a lot of things.   He was a greasy-haired 
wiry little hippy that drove an old italian convertible (very finicky with dual 
carbs...) and had a penchant for visiting the bars/brothels in Mexico (this was 
a border town) and probably got rolled by someone at least once a year... and 
had the stories (and scuffs) to tell about it.  He taught me binary 
logic/arithmetic and showed me how that related to the somewhat 
similar/different discrete/analog systems behind the carousels (all the 
electronics were exposed, so you could trace wires and watch relays open/close) 
and even taught me the basics of analog circuits including soldering, relays, 
power amplifiers/transmitters.   Later, as I went into the all-digital world of 
Computer Science, It was as if I was learning about Mammals after growing up 
among only Marsupials.   Of course automobiles had their own share of 
analog-discrete logic with an HV (timed) side and a 12V mostly continuous (but 
with switches/relays) side.   This was the 70s and the autos of interest were 
mostly from the 50s/60s.

I went to LANL in 1981 to work on the Proton Storage Ring which was in some 
ways the epitome of an anolog/digital hybrid systems with huge subsystems being 
HV and HF while others were "utility" (110/60) and yet others were TTL.   The 
place was "in flux" all the time...  with magnetic fields (intended and 
unintended) coming and going effecting everything.   It was a quite the milieu. 
  Moving to HPC was both a relief and a whole new world...  even though I still 
worked with some analog systems, they were much less dangerous and much less 
high speed...  the digital stuff was lickety-split (by those days standards) 
and the introduction of vector and parallel (and eventually distributed) 
processing was new and interesting.   By the time I was mentoring others (90s), 
the backgrounds were almost exclusively digital and most if not all of the 
"kids" that came through had never even worked on their own cars, much less 
vending machine or automated tape carousel logic.   

As Y2K approached, a consultant from SAIC was working in my general area... we 
became friends... but his role and way of thinking was incredibly foreign to 
me.  One of his roles (he felt like a plant from the military-industrial into 
the military-scientific establishment) was to consult on Y2K readiness.   My 
system at the time had been hand-built on top of UNIX (replacing a VMS system 
that was falling apart every day) by a small team (3-5 of us) and while I did 
not know every line of code in the system (I had written a good portion of it), 
we had coding practices and standards and code-reviews and I was roughly 99.9% 
confident that we didn't have a single 2-digit date  in the system, nor did we 
depend on any libraries or system code which did.   The open-source/community 
nature of BSD Unix meant that everything we relied on and trusted without 
inspecting personally had been inspected by hundreds or thousands of others.   
The Y2K problem had been discussed a lot and there were plenty of procedures in 
place to encourage (though never ensure) that every code-team/system had 
expunged any possible Y2K bugs.   My SAIC buddy talked in SLOC and had metrics 
up the wazoo about things which almost exclusively did not apply (well) to our 
systems as-designed and as-built.   There may well have been (especially in the 
Business Processing side of the house) some big risk/holes, but I knew my 
system intimately and the other major/similar systems (slightly larger 
development teams with more turnover) were well in hand.  

We (the three major systems) also had on-call responsibility and were used to 
being called at 3AM if something wasn't right.... *we* had been trained by the 
operations staff to not leave them hanging... they could be pretty 
easy-going/helpful with those of us who answered our phones and were 
easy-going/helpful with them, but the few who thought they shouldn't have to 
help stand up a system they built when it fell over (or sprung a leak) at 3AM 
on a holiday discovered quickly that they would not be let off easier just 
because they were reluctant or pissy about the call.   Bottom line was that we 
(developers) knew that our systems had to run 24/7/365 and the 00:00:01 
01/01/00 was just like any other day, and if/when/as the dominoes might start 
to fall, it was OUR job to be right there standing back up any of OUR dominoes 
that might fall on their own or be knocked down by others.  There was a little 
rivalry between systems (operations as well as development) but for the most 
part of someone else's system was falling down and making  a mess (creating 
possible/implied bugs in other systems) we all pulled together pretty well.    
I don't know to this day if my SAIC friend understood how coordinated and 
intimate we all were, because he kept on predicting gloom and doom for us as 
the date approached.   As it was, there wasn't even much scurry as the 
calendar/clocks cranked over Y2K, and I don't remember any acute problems.   We 
(wanted to?) believed that the ADP side of the house had no end of problems due 
to their heavy dependence on commercial systems/layers/middle-ware/vendors.   
As I remember it, Y2K was pretty much a flop everywhere. 

All this in response to "IT is Not Sustainable".   I would claim that virtually 
NOTHING we build is sustainable... or at least there is a huge spectrum.   
Engineering can be incredibly robust within it's design parameters, but is 
often incredibly fragile when confronted with a unexpected conditions...   
Evolved systems are also simultaneously fragile and robust.   They are robust 
within the "basins of attraction" implied by the ecosystem they operate within 
but once pushed out of those robust regions they can self-destruct quickly... 
I've been studying (very loosely) the myriad examples of species extinction and 
habitat loss and cascading failures (in progress and/or impending) in our 
ecosystems and am appalled at how unprepared we (humans, engineers, even 
scientists) are to apprehend the fragile interconnectedness and "designed for 
near-optimal-conditions" we have set up.   Not precisely a house of cards, a 
line of dominos, a stack of Jenga sticks, but not precisely NOT those either.

My recent trip to Europe/Scandinavia opened my eyes to some things I was 
previously under-aware of.   The evolved-engineered systems of polder and canal 
and dike and hydrology in the Netherlands is perhaps the most impressive.   
Realizing that they started significantly holding back the north sea during the 
"little ice age" (dikes and polders had started earlier, but this was when they 
really came into their own?) helps me to appreciate the difference between what 
they have done there over centuries vs what our own Army Corps has done in less 
than 100...   and most to the point, the ways a whole culture can adapt to 
things including their own engineering given many generations, but how we 
"moderns" don't have time to adapt culturally to the changes.   We DO adapt 
(the talk of telephones and the earliest examples leading up to a global 
wireless, multi-system-technology mesh/grid being an example), but it isn't 
clear to me that our adaptation is *deep* enough to be robust...  

Another example in less detail is what has been come to be called "the Nordic 
Secret" which is roughly the response of Scandinavia to the enlightenment 
followed by the industrial revolution and perhaps most acutely the post WWII 
industrial/cultural explosion in the west.   In many ways they follow the rest 
of the West, but it seems they may actually know "a secret" about 
sustainability, both industrially and culturally.

The "Endogenous Existential Threats" of our time are many/myriad and to the 
point... Endogenous... self-generatated...   and while we may be taking down a 
lot of the biosphere-as-we-know it with us, the biggest tragedy seems to be set 
to land ON us, and those closest to us (our domisticates and the remaining 
large mammal species)...  though that also may simply be an anthropocentric 
view.   

As Dave's title says "IT" is not sustainable...   you name the "it" and it very 
likely has a lamer lifetime than you imagine (my Y2K anecdote 
notwithstanding)...

I WILL say that despite my neo-Luddite rants, I've become more of an 
Eco-Modernist of late...  not necessarily wanting to trust that we can 
"technology" our way out of the disasters we are creating with our technology, 
but recognizing that perhaps we have little other choice (culturally)...  and 
that we must *try* to walk the tightrope of using "fire to fight fire" but with 
(perhaps) a lot more self-awareness than that which we used to paint ourselves 
into this (mixed metaphor of a) corner.

</ramble>

- Steve

 

On 12/26/19 9:08 AM, Frank Wimberly wrote:

 

"CenturyLink (NYSE: CTL) has set a goal to reduce power consumption on its 
public switched telephone network by nearly 22,000 megawatt-hours a year, 
reducing greenhouse gas emissions as more customers migrate to VoIP and mobile 
voice services.

Although CenturyLink is growing its IP-based voice service, this project is 
focused on consolidating more than 400,000 legacy PSTN subscriber lines across 
50 Class 5 voice switches. "

 

They're called class 5 because of 5ESS which is the most used class 5 switch at 
CenturyLink.

Sorry, but I had to clarify this.

 

Frsnk

-----------------------------------
Frank Wimberly

My memoir:
https://www.amazon.com/author/frankwimberly

My scientific publications:
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Frank_Wimberly2

Phone (505) 670-9918

 

On Thu, Dec 26, 2019, 8:43 AM Frank Wimberly <wimber...@gmail.com 
<mailto:wimber...@gmail.com> > wrote:


June 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this template message). 5ESS used in a 
mobile telephone network. The 5ESS Switching System is a Class 5 telephone 
electronic switching system developed by ...

-----------------------------------
Frank Wimberly

My memoir:
https://www.amazon.com/author/frankwimberly

My scientific publications:
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Frank_Wimberly2

Phone (505) 670-9918

 

On Thu, Dec 26, 2019, 8:36 AM Marcus Daniels <mar...@snoutfarm.com 
<mailto:mar...@snoutfarm.com> > wrote:

Frank writes:

 

“This was the telephone network in question.“

 

With the mobile carriers and VOIP, I wonder how much of that code is still 
used?  I once worked for a small company that wrote software to do billing for 
long distance telephone carriers.  I was amazed by the seemingly arbitrary 
complexity.   Complex at a policy and inter-organizational level, not just the 
software.

 

Marcus

 

From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com <mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com> > on 
behalf of Frank Wimberly <wimber...@gmail.com <mailto:wimber...@gmail.com> >
Reply-To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com 
<mailto:friam@redfish.com> >
Date: Thursday, December 26, 2019 at 5:39 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com 
<mailto:friam@redfish.com> >
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] IT is Not Sustainable

 

At Bell Labs we sure didn't pay anyone by LOC.  We also had code reviews and 
software tools to enforce standards and very high pay.  With a brand new PhD I 
made more than all but the 3 most senior members of the CS faculty at Pitt 
where I was a grad student.  This was the telephone network in question. 

 

Despite the high pay I disliked software administration methodology.  The 
disagreements between the software tool developers (version control, 
integration of subsystems, compilers, etc) and the implementors of the 
applications, such as call processing, were epic.  Recall that Bell Labs 
invented C and Unix.  After 18 months I returned to Pittsburgh to work at 
Carnegie Mellon in Robotics for two thirds the salary.

 

Number 5 ESS was first deployed in March 1982, 4 years after work began.  I 
suspect that it didn't have 200 million lines of code then, but close to it.  
Maybe Dave doesn't consider it an IT project but many of the software tools 
that were developed were included in later Unix releases, I believe.

 

It's going to be a beautiful day in Santa Fe.

 

Frank

 

 

-----------------------------------
Frank Wimberly

My memoir:
https://www.amazon.com/author/frankwimberly

My scientific publications:
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Frank_Wimberly2

Phone (505) 670-9918

 

On Thu, Dec 26, 2019, 1:28 AM Gary Schiltz <g...@naturesvisualarts.com 
<mailto:g...@naturesvisualarts.com> > wrote:

Spot on. 

 

On Thu, Dec 26, 2019 at 2:29 AM Marcus Daniels <mar...@snoutfarm.com 
<mailto:mar...@snoutfarm.com> > wrote:

Most programmers won't struggle to rationalize or improve code written by other 
people.    The problem is that people are selfish.  They think that their 10K 
LOC problem is beautiful and nimble, but that 1M LOC was once that too.    It's 
the behavior of teenagers.

On 12/25/19, 10:47 PM, "Friam on behalf of Russell Standish" 
<friam-boun...@redfish.com <mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com>  on behalf of 
li...@hpcoders.com.au <mailto:li...@hpcoders.com.au> > wrote:

    It's all about the LOC! Actually, I kind of agree - having worked on
    some MegaLOC codebases that functionally seemed to be no more complex
    than a 10KLOC project I'm involved in, the 10KLOC project is much more
    nimble - compile times are far less, making changes to the code easier
    and bugs less troublesome to winkle out.

    I've also refactored or rewritten pieces of code to slash the LOC by a
    factor of 3 or more for that particular section (eg 3KLOC -> 1KLOC) -
    but usually when bugs and problems kept on cropping up in that
    section.

    Even though the LOC is an entirely bogus measurement - if you paid a
    programmer by LOC, you'd get boilerplate and crappy comments.

    -- 

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Dr Russell Standish                    Phone 0425 253119 (mobile)
    Principal, High Performance Coders
    Visiting Senior Research Fellow        hpco...@hpcoders.com.au 
<mailto:hpco...@hpcoders.com.au> 
    Economics, Kingston University         http://www.hpcoders.com.au
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

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