I used to hang around the Bell Labs Murray Hill 1127 lab -- where UNIX originated -- sometimes when I was in the area. A fond memory is sitting at a terminal in there (probably a Blit) working on a program back on my L.A. system over the Net. I ran into a complicated C declaration issue. Sitting a few feet away at the next terminal was Dennis Ritchie (dmr) -- a wonderful guy. Well hell, since he created C, who better to ask about this. So I did, and he instantly offered me an elegant solution I would never have thought of. Years later, it occurred to me that this was the closest I'd ever be to getting advice directly from a god.
I can't overemphasize the comradery back then. On one of my trips out to New Jersey, Dennis and (I believe) Brian Kernighan picked me up at the airport. The UNIX/ARPANET/Internet world was relatively tiny compared with what it would grow to be. An entirely different age. And this isn't just some old guy looking through rose-tinted hindsight talking now. Trust me on this.

@lauren

Wow. Was this in the 1970s?

@Phosphenes Most of my trips East for this stuff were probably in the late 70s to mid-80s period. That's also when I had my experience at the World Trade Center when I was presenting at an early Usenix conference at CUNY.
@lauren I remember... It really was like this.
@lauren that’s so cool. My grandpa (elec engineer) used to work at Bell Labs until about 1970 or so.
@jeffzugale I spent time at three of the BTL facilities: Murray Hill (the most celebrated site), Whippany, and Holmdel (the Holmdel building made famous recently by the "Severance" TV series). You could feel the history at MH everywhere.
@lauren IIRC Grandpa was recruited straight out of MIT in the 20s and spent his entire work life there. In part I owe my existence to that. Crazy, right?
@jeffzugale That how Bell Labs worked in its heyday, and why it's effective destruction is such a loss to humanity.

@lauren

Awesome! I have a PC case autographed by Phil Zimmermann. I was slightly shocked that I was the only person who brought the cover and a sharpie to a talk of his.

@lauren

Glad to know that dmr's home page is still being preserved, even though it tends to move around from time to time. Currently it's at Nokia.

https://www.nokia.com/bell-labs/about/dennis-m-ritchie/

@lauren I'm curious what the problem was and the solution proposed
@oblomov @lauren There are 10 types of people in the world: those who think this story isn’t about the C programming issue, and those who instantly realized that 10 was a binary reference.
@nep @oblomov @lauren in this context I would have been very disappointed if it were not a binary reference! Rest of text was too short of it were decimal or hex.
@oblomov Some horrific function pointer mess. I don't recall the details ...

@lauren @oblomov i miss function pointers and i miss C, having been drawn into web stuff for a long time.

I learnt a lot from a guy who worked directly with Stroustrup on defining the C++ standard. Such humble guys, you could walk up to them and ask them anything.

The rude MBA takeover from engineering across industries is terrible.

@mahadevank @lauren @oblomov Yes, finance managers should not be allowed to run non-finance companies. That is why Boeing is a mess right now.
@lauren Lovely anecdote. Thank you for sharing this.
@lauren in the mid 90s I worked at a PERL shop. our chief programmer had a problem and asked a question on USENET. Larry Wall answered. he was starstrucked.

@lauren That Blit terminal looks pretty neat. I wish things like that had taken off commercially. Guessing they were five figures each, like the Xerox graphical machines?

But having something that looks like a workstation, over a 19.2K modem, is really neat.

@lauren

Declaration of external functions with multiple header files problem?

Ah, the joys of K&R C.

#Coding

@lauren I worked in a peripheral organization at Bell Labs (BL Tech Pubs), not the Murray Hill lab, but every time I needed to talk to someone from MH they were incredibly helpful. And it happened more often than you would think, because I was one of the people running www.bell-labs.com. Love your story.