Jörg Schilling, aka "schily", has died from cancer.
For those who can read German: https://twitter.com/FUZxxl/status/1447319844295254020 https://www.heise.de/news/Nachruf-Open-Source-Welt-trauert-um-Joerg-Schilling-6214446.html
J?rg Schilling, aka "schily", has died from cancer.<snip>
Jörg Schilling, aka "schily", has died from cancer.
On 11.10.2021 at 17:42, Christian Weisgerber scribbled:
Jörg Schilling, aka "schily", has died from cancer.
For those who can read German: https://twitter.com/FUZxxl/status/1447319844295254020 https://www.heise.de/news/Nachruf-Open-Source-Welt-trauert-um-Joerg-Schilling-6214446.html
Rest in peace, Jörg, and thank you for your many contributions to the
free & open source software community. You have truly made a difference
for the better in this world.
On Mon, 11 Oct 2021 22:58:36 +0200
Aragorn <thorongil@telenet.be> wrote:
On 11.10.2021 at 17:42, Christian Weisgerber scribbled:
Jörg Schilling, aka "schily", has died from cancer.
For those who can read German: https://twitter.com/FUZxxl/status/1447319844295254020 https://www.heise.de/news/Nachruf-Open-Source-Welt-trauert-um-Joerg-Schilling-6214446.html
Rest in peace, Jörg, and thank you for your many contributions to
the free & open source software community. You have truly made a difference for the better in this world.
Fully agree. He has made contributions on usenet too including this
group. Rest in peace.
On 14.10.2021 at 15:38, Spiros Bousbouras scribbled:
On Mon, 11 Oct 2021 22:58:36 +0200
Aragorn <thorongil@telenet.be> wrote:
On 11.10.2021 at 17:42, Christian Weisgerber scribbled:
Jörg Schilling, aka "schily", has died from cancer.
For those who can read German: https://twitter.com/FUZxxl/status/1447319844295254020 https://www.heise.de/news/Nachruf-Open-Source-Welt-trauert-um-Joerg-Schilling-6214446.html
Rest in peace, Jörg, and thank you for your many contributions to
the free & open source software community. You have truly made a difference for the better in this world.
Fully agree. He has made contributions on usenet too including this
group. Rest in peace.
He was in many GNU/Linux and UNIX newsgroups, even going back as far as
the year 2000, which is when I first "met" him, Usenet-wise. He was
always helpful and informative, and many people are still using his
cdrtools software — myself included.
I guess the open source movement is relatively young.
On 15.10.2021 02:53, Spiros Bousbouras wrote:
I guess the open source movement is relatively young.
I had my first contact with Open Source tools during the late 1980's.
Marking the FSF (Free Software Foundation) founding institutionally
as a sensible starting point (1985) I wouldn't call that "young",
in the fast evolving IT context even less.
I'm glad the movement had
not only stayed alive for so long but even flourished and is now every
day an inherent part of (not necessarily knowingly) everyone's live.
On Fri, 15 Oct 2021 11:49:42 +0200
Janis Papanagnou <janis_papanagnou@hotmail.com> wrote:
On 15.10.2021 02:53, Spiros Bousbouras wrote:
I guess the open source movement is relatively young.
I had my first contact with Open Source tools during the late 1980's.
Marking the FSF (Free Software Foundation) founding institutionally
as a sensible starting point (1985) I wouldn't call that "young",
in the fast evolving IT context even less.
It is young relative to the average human lifespan.
As for IT evolving fast ,
new fashions (or "technologies") certainly appear at a quick pace but a lot of the old also stick around. Unix , Fortran and COBOL are older than open source (by decades for the last 2) and are still going strong.
I'm glad the movement had
not only stayed alive for so long but even flourished and is now every
day an inherent part of (not necessarily knowingly) everyone's live.
On 15.10.2021 15:59, Spiros Bousbouras wrote:
On Fri, 15 Oct 2021 11:49:42 +0200
Janis Papanagnou <janis_papanagnou@hotmail.com> wrote:
On 15.10.2021 02:53, Spiros Bousbouras wrote:
I guess the open source movement is relatively young.
I had my first contact with Open Source tools during the late 1980's.
Marking the FSF (Free Software Foundation) founding institutionally
as a sensible starting point (1985) I wouldn't call that "young",
in the fast evolving IT context even less.
It is young relative to the average human lifespan.
Well, it's still 35+ years, about two generations! (Even to human
lifespan that's a pretty long period. YMMV, of course.)
As for IT evolving fast ,
new fashions (or "technologies") certainly appear at a quick pace but a lot >> of the old also stick around. Unix , Fortran and COBOL are older than open >> source (by decades for the last 2) and are still going strong.
Lambda-Calculus or the first automatisms are even older. Not sure what
the reference to these two languages helps for the argument. They have
at best a relevance in legacy systems (that no one dares to touch) and
long grown libraries (that are primarily just called from other modern
On 2021-10-16, Janis Papanagnou <janis_papanagnou@hotmail.com> wrote:
On 15.10.2021 15:59, Spiros Bousbouras wrote:
[ Fortran and COBOL ]
[...] Not sure what
the reference to these two languages helps for the argument. They have
at best a relevance in legacy systems (that no one dares to touch) and
long grown libraries (that are primarily just called from other modern
Fortran is stillthe language of choice for people doing numerical work
It is not legacy.
On 17.10.2021 17:00, William Unruh wrote:<snip>
On 2021-10-16, Janis Papanagnou <janis_papanagnou@hotmail.com> wrote:
<snip>Fortran is stillthe language of choice for people doing numerical work
Really? Still? Where? Any why?
Fortran has "relevance in long grown libraries", the second category
I mentioned. There are long time established libraries specifically
for numerical computation since decades and still in active use. Yes.
Or did you mean that for some people Fortran is also the language of
choice to do the programming around these libraries? Well, if so - as
someone with CS background and who has programmed in Fortran and knows
that language -, I can just shake my head. Why would one want to code
in Fortran, nowadays? Seriously asked.
Jörg Schilling, aka "schily", has died from cancer.
For those who can read German: >https://twitter.com/FUZxxl/status/1447319844295254020 >https://www.heise.de/news/Nachruf-Open-Source-Welt-trauert-um-Joerg-Schilling-6214446.html
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