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ACM to Honor TCP/IP Creators with Turing Award
Posted by
Zonk
on Wed Feb 16, 2005 10:40 AM
from the i-heart-packets dept.
from the i-heart-packets dept.
bth writes "The New York Times reports that Vint Cerf and Robert Kahn will receive the ACM Turing Award. According to the ACM website: The Association for Computing Machinery, has named Vinton G. Cerf and Robert E. Kahn the winners of the 2004 A.M. Turing Award, considered the "Nobel Prize of Computing," for pioneering work on the design and implementation of the Internet's basic communications protocols." Commentary from Groklaw also available.
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Developers: Peter Naur Wins 2005 Turing Award 135 comments
An anonymous reader writes "The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) has named Peter Naur the winner of the 2005 A.M. Turing Award. The award is for Dr. Naur's fundamental contributions to programming language design and the definition of Algol 60, to compiler design, and to the art and practice of computer programming. The Turing Award is considered to be the Nobel Prize of computing, and a well-deserved recognition of Dr. Naur's pioneering contributions to the field."
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About time (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:About time (Score:5, Funny)
I se dad pepe n y back yrd.
Parent
Re:About time (Score:3, Informative)
Good to see a news that really matters (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Good to see a news that really matters (Score:2)
Just kidding! Gosh! I know this is important.
Packet switching before them? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Packet switching before them? (Score:4, Insightful)
that is like saying "what about the guy who first cut open the chest of some one and failed to successfully perform heart surgery?"
the people that get credit for stuff are not the ones who come up with an under performance. they are the ones that come up with something that out performs even what they thought posable.
Parent
Re:Packet switching before them? (Score:5, Informative)
----
Most notably, for the last 10 years, Leonard Kleinrock, a computer scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, has been laying claim to having invented packet switching, the general method of splitting up a message into digital packets, routing the packets individually and reassembling the message on the other end.
Until Dr. Kleinrock began making his case prominently, two others, Paul Baran and Donald W. Davies, had been widely recognized as packet switching's inventors. Dr. Davies died in 2000.
In recent years, Lawrence G. Roberts, who in the late 1960's designed the Arpanet, a precursor of the Internet, has been a supporter of Dr. Kleinrock's claim.
Parent
Re:Packet switching before them? (Score:2)
And the funny thing is... (Score:5, Interesting)
Now a real question : If Baran and Davies had been granted a patent on packet switching networks in 1964, what would the internet look like now?
Re:And the funny thing is... (Score:3, Informative)
Some slashdotters might. This is hardly a unified group, much less a group consciousness.
OTOH if it were Microsoft introducing the standard, those expressing worry probably would be correct in their concerns, if history is any judge at all.
Now a r
the father of SMTP certainly will not win (Score:4, Funny)
but I bet the father of the protocol that sits on top of SMTP to add SPAM protection will.
Re:the father of SMTP certainly will not win (Score:3, Informative)
Jon's homepage [isi.edu]
Also check RFC 2468.
J
My appreciation for standards (Score:5, Insightful)
Congratulations to some truly innovative pioneers.
They haven't received one yet? (Score:4, Insightful)
You'd have thought they would've received this during the dot-com boom or before that.
I won that (Score:4, Funny)
It's suprising (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's suprising (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re:It's suprising (Score:2)
Are you trying to distinguish yourself from people who can't see beyond their Windows PC?
Re:It's suprising (Score:5, Informative)
In Vinton Cerf's words:
ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2468.txt [rfc-editor.org]
http://www.usc.edu/dept/pubrel/trojan_family/spri
Parent
Thank you for Jon Postel links. (Score:4, Insightful)
What a strange beast, the Internet, which can be a vessel of human connection, understanding and sharing of feelings, aside from all the latching shift registers and so forth.
Mr. Morse transmitted over an early electronic network, "What hath God wrought?" Don't know the answer to that, but I do know what Morse, Cerf, Postel and others hath wrought.
Thanks for reminding us.
Parent
Re:It's suprising (Score:2)
It's suprising the people who architect some of the finest PC ideas are not recognized more by the media.
This happens in all areas, not just computer science. When was the last time you remember hearing Joseph Cugnot's name on the 11 o'clock news, or reading John Lambert's name in the paper? Both were pioneers in the automotive field -- the former developed the first self-propelled road vehicle, while the latter developed the USA's first gas-powered car -- but they seldom get any mention. Instead, yo
Re:It's suprising (Score:2, Interesting)
He, more than any other single person, is the reason why I can own my own car.
Perhaps more importantly, and counterintuitive, he made cars cheaply in part by paying his workers more.
"Henry Ford has made more money by paying more and charging less . .
I don't know what kind of a buddy Ford would have been, but I think it's unreasonable to think that he didn't c
Re:It's suprising (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe that's why google has 10X the number of hits for than with Kahns name. Bob did the vast majority of the work on TCP/IP and is still a scientist, Vint is the Madonna of the modern internet. Capable, but truly adept at shameless self promotion.
Bob Matcalf (who invented ethernet) called Vint "Darth Cerf".
Nice to see (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Nice to see (Score:3, Informative)
I don't think you have the faintest idea what you're talking about. The winners (list below, from ACM's website) have always been a mixture of practitioners and theorists. For example, Wilkes built the first stored-program computer, Backus was in charge of the first successful compiler project, Knuth created TeX, and everybody knows abou
TCP part (Score:3, Funny)
Not exactly a perfect invention (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm not saying what they did was all bad
As they say, "put up or shut up" (Score:3, Insightful)
award them for creating the TCP layer, which breaks down massively under (non-congestion related) packet loss?
The greatest majority of traffic on the Internet is TCP acknowledgments (35%), meaning that TCP is the most used transport layer protocol of the few other alternatives. If it is as bad as you say it is, why is everybody using it ?
If you're such an expert, spend time fixing the problems you think exist, by contributing to the IETF, rather than running an IRC server, and complaining anonymously
Why Not? (Score:2)
Why not? They're letting Bill Gates give a keynote speech at the RSA security conference
Just goes to show that money will, in fact, buy you anything, and even well educated people will grovel at the ass of the wealthy. Next he'll buy a Turing award of his very own, for
Great read (Score:3, Insightful)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP/IP#Layers_in_the_ TCP.2FIP_stack [wikipedia.org]
what about UDP? (Score:2)
What about Van Jacobson? (Score:3, Informative)
Size does not matter (Score:5, Insightful)
IMHO the genius of Kahn and Cerf lies in the fact that they "thought deeply of simple things" almost exactly like Thompson and Ritchie did with Unix. For me, the transmission error handling and the routing are simply beautiful.
If a packet is lost, IP and UDP simply don't care and neither should the underlying layers do (forget about x.25 for a moment.) Try explaining this apparently frivolous approach to an IBM SNA guy -or even to most non networking CS people. Hell, IBM even built quality of service stuff in their Tokenring stuff. Nice to have, if you can switch it OFF. If a packet or frame is lost: too bad, TCP will take care of it, anything else should stop whining about it.
The fact that part of the routing is done by IP on any node is also marvelous. It made the protocol usable in small networks without having to buy or explicitly set-up a router. You know, equipment used to be horribly expensive. Ever studied SNA or OSI?
There would be loads of jobs for us techies in supporting the Internet if it were made up SNA, OSI or NetBIOS. But who'd want them?
Would Metcalf deserve the same honor as Kahn and Cerf but then for inventing Ethernet? I'd say yes.
Another argument against software patents (Score:3, Interesting)
Is William Shatner presenting the award? (Score:5, Funny)
Turing award? (Score:3, Funny)
Right Guys, Wrong Award (Score:3, Insightful)
It seems to me that TCP/IP is an fine engineering result that has benefited from being in the right place at the right time. If circumstances were different we would be lauding the inventors of Banyan Vines or DECnet or some schlock M$ protocol. Thankfully we are not. But the idea of associating workmanlike engineering results with a theoretical genious like Turing and other deserving winners of the Turing Award is irksome.
Vint Cerf - helping to destroy the net (Score:5, Interesting)
For a man that was so instrumental in creating the underlying technology the Internet is based on, he sure has come a long way since then.
He works for MCI, the only US network that refuses to terminate spammers, spamware peddlers and bulletproof hosting facilities. Vint Cerf is claiming they can't do that, because of 1st Amendment issues. For someone as smart as him, he sure can be clueless; 1st Amendment does not apply to anyone but the US Government.
This is what Steve Linford of spamhaus.org wrote on SPAM-L yesterday about Vint Cerf's role, among other things, in all this:
Important but a Turing Award? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's no doubt that we would speak about Internet protocols a little differently had these guys not done what they did, but to me it seems like we'd just be saying some other acronym (does anyone really buy that they invented the idea of packets and it didn't come about until 1973?) They invented the basic scheme, but the real cleverness seems to have come as a result of the various exponential-backoff mechanisms and other complexities in today's implementation of TCP/IP, not the basic protocol they designed in the 70's.
Looking at the previous winners [toronto.edu] it's kind of hard to tell what the point of the Turing award is. In some cases it's given to researchers that have made very influential theoretical break-throughs and others that seem to have invented something that became popular. Maybe I'm just being sidetracked by what is essentially the old debate about whether "systems" research is true research since it's often difficult to comparatively evaluate alternatives.
I just like to see the award go to people that did something that no one else (or at least very few people) working at the time would have been likely to think of and I'm not sure this meets that criterion.
Did they really deserve it? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is a travesty (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re:This is a travesty (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interes ting-people/200009/msg00052.html
Parent
Re:Turing what? (Score:2)
Yeah, but it had a 2-day ping time. This was mostly due to tape spinning.
Now that we have terabyte-size disk drives, they've got the ping time down to under an hour.
(Hey, it's better than the ping time to Cassini.
Re:Turing what? (Score:3, Interesting)
It was also limited by the failure to implement an infinite tape.
I don't remember where I read this; it's been a while. I know that a number of different p
Re:Turing what? (Score:2)
Re:Turing what? (Score:2)
Re:Turing what? (Score:2)
Re:Turing what? (Score:2)
Re:Why ? (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, *most* sci/tech awards don't measure up to Einstein's work. Those are big shoes to fill. Perhaps they should rank the awards, or offer a Century Award for the biggies. Einstein didn't even get a prize for relativity, it was something slightly more obscure IIRC.
But you are right in that much of software and compute