The author is an MS student in statistics. Seems that Unix is well-represented in STEM university fields.
Old-timey Unix (as opposed to things like Plan 9) won. When does widespread ’70s/’80s computing stop being impressive? You say “unknown” as if we were talking about some research software, or some old and largely forgotten software. Unix shell programming doesn’t have hipster cred.
> When does widespread ’70s/’80s computing stop being impressive?
When the majority adopts it, or at least knows about it.
> You say “unknown” as if we were talking about some research software, or some old and largely forgotten software. Unix shell programming doesn’t have hipster cred.
It's unknown to those that are only experienced in working in a GUI, which I believe is still the majority of developers. In my experience, anyone of those people are always impressed when seeing me work in my screen filled with terminals, so it does seem to have some "hipster cred". :)
> When does widespread ’70s/’80s computing stop being impressive? You say “unknown” as if we were talking about some research software, or some old and largely forgotten software.
That's precisely what I'm talking about. The 70s/80s produced tons of insight into computer use in general, and programming in particular, that were mostly forgotten, and are slowly being rediscovered, or reinvented every couple years. Unix in fact was a step backwards in terms of capabilities exposed to users; it won because of economics.
Old-timey Unix (as opposed to things like Plan 9) won. When does widespread ’70s/’80s computing stop being impressive? You say “unknown” as if we were talking about some research software, or some old and largely forgotten software. Unix shell programming doesn’t have hipster cred.