by kristopolous
1 subcomments
- I was trying to get a hold of him for years. People who knew him kept saying they'd get me in touch, never did.
His name pops up a lot during the 60s and 70s as an author on numerous articles about networks, often regarding many competing, now defunct alternative networks to the Internet.
Examples of scans I personally made: https://siliconfolklore.com/internet-history/farber-datamati... and https://siliconfolklore.com/internet-history/farber-datamati...
He's one of those people where you go through archival industry journals and are like "oh look there he is again"
For instance, SNOBOL https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SNOBOL
- Met him without knowing who this person was when proposing a decentralized anti-virus platform, he cared and helped a lot. Besides teaching, Dave never stopped learning. Quite a good role model for everyone here.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_J._Farber
- Good to see a lot of these archived: https://seclists.org/interesting-people/
What a life lived.
- Farberisms
https://www2.cs.arizona.edu/icon/oddsends/farber.htm
by ricktdotorg
0 subcomment
- Dave's Interesting People email list was a TRUE highlight of the early Internet.
by jordanscales
0 subcomment
- Was fortunate enough to attend a few guest lectures from him at Stevens when I got my minor degree in science and technology studies. He was so sharp that I was blown away that he was (at the time) 80 years old.
I wonder what his life in Tokyo was like! Did he ever write about it?
by reader9274
1 subcomments
- "at the too-young age of 91"
Ok I chuckled
- I think a black bar is in order.
- RIP.
Original email mentions “too young age of 91”, but IMO that’s a beautiful age to reach, especially for a life seemingly well lived!
by compsciphd
0 subcomment
- last email from IP was on Feb 1. Though I really haven't looked at it in years. it used to be much more discussion oriented.
- Another one of the greats gone.
by 31337Logic
0 subcomment
- RIP :-(
by andyjohnson0
0 subcomment
- Another legend of our field has left the stage. RIP.
I never knew him, but I've been lurking on his IP list since the nineties. It was always informative, even as the web made tech news pervasive. Black bar, I reckon.
by throw_m239339
0 subcomment
- RIP.
by deejaaymac
0 subcomment
- RIP Dave
- RIP. A true computer science legend and Bell Labs alumni.
by vikkymelani
0 subcomment
- [flagged]