That so sounds like Dennis!   I can add a couple of other things about Dennis, outside of work. 

A group of us used to go into New York from time to time to take in a concert, and Dennis was often one of the group.   One time in the dead of winter, we went to an Early Music concert in a cold drafty church in winter--it was part of a series called "Music before 1620".    The musicians were almost unable to get their instruments to stay in tune, and the whole thing was kind of train wreck.   On the way back, Dennis said "It's clear that pitch was invented sometime after 1620."

On another occasion, we found ourselves in Brooklyn having blintzes outside on picnic tables.  My 4-year-old son was with us.  My wife was telling people how my son was starting to ask questions about sex.   My son, hearing his name, said "What's sex?".   Dennis said "See."

A work-related anecdote.  There was a manager in USG who managed to get on the nerves of many of us in Research.   One day we came in to discover that he had been promoted and took a job in Japan.   We were discussing this at lunch, and someone said "Why Japan?".   Dennis said "They haven't opened their office on the moon yet."

Steve

PS:  I certainly remember the belt buckle quip.  That chip was so big that they could not finish the test patterns before the chip came back.   So they generated random tests and compared the results until they found two that were the same.  They concluded that these two chips were fabricated correctly, and went on from there.   The chip had a number of flaws, and we scrambled to fix them in software.  One was that the branch instruction garbled the last 4 bits of the branch target.   So one of the guys hacked the assembler to make every label the center of a "target" of 32 NOP instructions.  We were able to get the chip to run, and even run an asteroid game....  The guy to made the fix put up a sign outside of his office that said "BellMac chips fixed while U wait."   The same VP was rather PO'd about this as well...



----- Original Message -----
From:
"ches@Cheswick.com" <ches@cheswick.com>

To:
"Warren Toomey" <wkt@tuhs.org>
Cc:
<tuhs@tuhs.org>
Sent:
Fri, 29 Jun 2018 06:53:02 -0400
Subject:
Re: [TUHS] Any Good dmr Anecdotes?


Dennis, do you have any recommendations on good books to use the learn C?

I don’t know, I never had to learn C. -dmr

Message by ches. Tappos by iPad.


> On Jun 29, 2018, at 3:53 AM, Warren Toomey <wkt@tuhs.org> wrote:
>
> We do have ken on the list, so I won't be presumptious to ask for ken-related
> anecdotes, but would anybody like to share some dmr anecdotes?
>
> I never met Dennis in person, but he was generous with his time about my
> interest in Unix history; and also with sharing the material he still had.
>
> Dennis was very clever, though. He would bring out a new artifact and say:
> well, here's what I still have of X. Pity it will never execute again, sigh.
>
> I'm sure he knew that I would take that as a challenge. Mind you, it worked,
> which is why we now have the first Unix kernel in C, the 'nsys' kernel, and
> the first two C compilers, in executable format.
>
> Any other good anecdotes?
>
> Cheers, Warren