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Welcome to Orcmid's Lair, the playground for family connections, pastimes, and scholarly vocation -- the collected professional and recreational work of Dennis E. Hamilton
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2005-03-15Don Knuth on Science as Art and Scholarship as Community Effort
NPR : Donald Knuth, Founding Artist of Computer Science. Here's the kind of podcast that I couldn't not listen to. My contemporary (we're a year apart) talks about how he looks at problems and why the kitchen wastebacket is in the center of the room. The interview wanders through Donald Knuth's office at home, his filing system (behind him in the photo), and how he toils in the fields of Computer Science. I was awestruck and moved by 00m30s into the NPR host's lead-in. Knuth's gentle message and playful spirit were brought to my attention at the perfect moment this morning. I am failing to maintain even the simplest schedule for my M.Sc in IT. I can't find a simple C-Language bibliographic-entry addbib program like the one I compiled and used on MS-DOS 20 years ago, and I've been obsessing over that problem instead of keeping up with my commitments. I hate do-overs and don't trust myself to quickly build an off-hand replacement for the program I've misplaced on some old computer somewhere and haven't found in Gnu or Linux code anywhere. I've been making myself crazy installing and removing poor substitutes. In the midst of that maelstrom, I was thinking, just last night, that Knuth's taking 10 years out for TeX couldn't have been worth it. How stupid and arrogant of me. I've witnessed firsthand the power of Knuth getting his tools in order ahead of a project. I watched him build his own assembler so he could perform faster run-debug-fix-reassemble-run ... cycles for a FORTRAN compiler he was building. And he arranged for that assembler to take hints into minimum-latency optimization that it provided; then he had it produce flowcharted documentation from his specially-annotated comments. Recalling that inspiring feat, I suddenly felt much lighter, caught my breath and took a calmer approach. I'm adopting a custom *.bib template that I can honor by hand in a text editor. Later, when I have more space in my schedule, I'll make a little tool to provide guided entry and updating of annotated-bibliography files. Even later, I'll worry about extracting citations and references in the different formats I use: My idiosyncratic annotated bibliographies and the Harvard style for the dissertation. What a relief. I've been productively purposeful all day. Many thanks to anderbill for the heads-up about the NPR interview. Comments: Post a Comment |
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