Sujet : Re: So Long
De : jim (at) *nospam* bad.invalid (Jim Duff)
Groupes : comp.os.vmsDate : 17. Dec 2024, 23:24:37
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vjstn6$1tb0d$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 12/12/24 03:04, Jilly wrote:
Folks,
On Friday the time will come to close up my system and retire. I started this
journey in 1979, hired by Digital's Upgrade Training Program in CXO to learn
electronics and started working on the RM02/03 manufacturing line. From there
I went to NYC Field Service and in 1989 I met John Hockett at a CSC Road Show
interview. In May I was working on the VMS Internals and Performance team in
CX03, hugely lucky in getting Mark Morris as a cube mate. John & Mark were
primarily responsible for my progression in VMS Support. In 1992 I started
WFH and have been at home in Waverly, NY since 1994. I have worked with a
number of highly talented people in the VMS ecosystem and am very grateful for
all the collaborations I received over the years.
My plans are to travel for family events, play more golf, do more racing
travel but most of all, play more poker.
I wish VSI all the best for the future of VMS.
Have a safe & happy holiday.
Jilly
Congratulations on your retirement!
If I recall, the last bug you and I uncovered was this little beauty...
https://www.eight-cubed.com/blog/archives/001285.htmlhttps://www.eight-cubed.com/blog/archives/001289.htmlWhich turned out to be an issue with the port of an MACRO-32 module to C back in the VAX to Alpha port. If I remember correctly, the problem was the port had failed to include a memory barrier in the C code which was implied in the MACRO-32, and the bug hid for over 30 years until an IA64 doing *lots* of directory renames on the same disk in parallel uncovered it.
Fun times :)
Jim
-- eight-cubed.com