You can't trust code that you did not totally create yourself.
— Ken Thompson
Unauthorized access to computer systems is already a serious crime in a few states and is currently being addressed in many more state legislatures as well as Congress.
The X server has to be the biggest program I've ever seen that doesn't do anything for you.
So maybe I can go back to being a Gardeners' World addict again.
On the one hand, the press, television, and movies make heroes of vandals by calling them whiz kids.
It is only the inadequacy of the criminal code that saves the hackers from very serious prosecution.
If you want to go somewhere, goto is the best way to get there.
I wanted to avoid, special IO for terminals.
I have to keep up with the scientific literature as part of my job, but increasingly I found myself reading things that weren't really relevant to my academic work, but were relevant to gardening.
I also have an idea for a book on biodiversity, and why and how we should be conserving it.
When in doubt, use brute force.
We tried to avoid, you know, records. We were told over and over that was probably the most serious mistake and the reason was the system would never catch on, because we didn't have records.
There's a lot of power in executing data - generating data and executing data.
The average gardener probably knows little about what is going on in his or her garden.
One of my most productive days was throwing away 1,000 lines of code.
No amount of source-level verification or scrutiny will protect you from using untrusted code.
In fact, we started off with two or three different shells and the shell had life of its own.
I wanted to separate data from programs, because data and instructions are very different.
I think the major good idea in Unix was its clean and simple interface: open, close, read, and write.
I am a very bottom-up thinker.
Grant, if we edited Fortran, I assume that you'd put a column thing in there.
We have persistant objects, they're called files.
There are no projects per se in the Computing Sciences Research Center.
That brings me to Dennis Ritchie. Our collaboration has been a thing of beauty.
One is that the perfect garden can be created overnight, which it can't.
It's always good to take an orthogonal view of something. It develops ideas.
In college, before video games, we would amuse ourselves by posing programming exercises.
I wanted to have virtual memory, at least as it's coupled with file systems.
I still have a full-time day job, which is why it took me five years to write An Ear to the Ground, and why I won't have another book finished by next week.
I am a programmer.
A well installed microcode bug will be almost impossible to detect.