TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Larry Tesler Has Died

1346 pointsby drallisonover 5 years ago
Larry Tesler has died. Larry was in the middle of many of the most influential of Silicon Valley projects and an insightful contributor. See his Wikipedia biography for a snapshot. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Larry_Tesler" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Larry_Tesler</a>

52 comments

alankayover 5 years ago
I knew Larry Tesler as a colleague, friend, member of my research group, manager, etc. for more than 50 years, almost as long as I knew Bert Sutherland.<p>There is an excellent obit for Larry at: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gizmodo.com&#x2F;larry-tessler-modeless-computing-advocate-has-passed-1841787408" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gizmodo.com&#x2F;larry-tessler-modeless-computing-advocat...</a><p>... and I expect another one from John Markoff -- who was a friend of his -- in the NYTimes.<p>In many ways, Larry did too many interesting things and had so much influence in too many areas for there to be any chance to characterize him technically. In short, he was a superb wide-spectrum(real) computer scientist who was also a very talented and skilled programmer.<p>His passing was sudden and unexpected, and I may return later to this note to add more details of his rich career.<p>For now, I remember him as great to work with in all aspects of his life. He was a great guy, and perhaps that sums him up as best as can be.
评论 #22374056 未加载
评论 #22377051 未加载
atdrummondover 5 years ago
Larry kindly traded letters with me when I was a young man attempting to learn programming via Object Pascal. Eventually, my mom made me write him a check for all the postage he had spent. In addition to sending me at least two letters a week for just around a decade, he shipped me dozens of books and manuals. One year for the holidays, someone sent me 4 large FedEx boxes filled with networking gear I desperately needed for a “M”MORPG game I was building. The return label read “53414e544120414e442048495320574f524b53484f50”. In the game, players were elves scrambling to defeat a corrupted workshop. The final boss was S̶a̶t̶a̶n̶ Santa himself.<p>It was only when I was older that I appreciated that he had probably sent me thousands of dollars worth of gear (and not in 2020 dollars!) in addition to the invaluable advice he provided, sometimes (frankly, often) unsolicited but always direct and always thought provoking.<p>While I never did become an extremely competent commercial developer, to this day I enjoy programming for programming’s own sake. Larry’s push for me to fix my own headaches, rather than simply giving me a metaphorical aspirin, resulted in my development of solutions for small hobby problems that it appeared often only myself and perhaps a few others shared.<p>As it turns out, in spite of (or thanks to) my niche interests, my curiosity and the method of targeted problem solving Larry fostered set me on a path I remain on today. Frankly, his contributions helped mold me as a man more than those of any other mentor of mine; that is absolutely meant as a compliment to his prescient pedagogy, rather than a slight at my life’s many other wonderful influences.<p>I’ve sold a few businesses thanks to Larry’s problem solving approach. The rest I founded are running profitably - and somehow I’ve never lost an investor money. My customers have always, above all else, been happy because they had their problems fixed. (Or, perhaps thanks to his influence, their happiness stemmed from my teams simply providing them with the tools they needed to solve their own problems!)<p>And because I followed Larry’s personal advice, I have been able to spend every day for nearly two decades doing what he encouraged and what has consistently engaged me: finding, isolating and destroying problems.<p>Thank you for everything.
评论 #22370733 未加载
评论 #22370220 未加载
评论 #22370343 未加载
评论 #22371834 未加载
评论 #22372793 未加载
mikelevinsover 5 years ago
I met Larry in about 1992 when I went to work on the Newton project. I had seen him around Apple before, and I knew who he was and what he was known for, but I didn&#x27;t actually meet him until I joined the Newton team. I found him friendly, modest, smart, shrewd, compassionate, full of interesting knowledge and ideas, and interested in other people and their ideas.<p>I got to know him better when John Sculley ordered him to have the Newton team ditch its Lisp OS and write one in C++. Larry approached me and a couple of other Lisp hackers and asked us to make a fresh start with Lisp and see what we could do on Newton. We wrote an experimental OS that Matt Maclaurin named &quot;bauhaus&quot;.<p>Larry had a sabbatical coming up right about then. He took it with us. He crammed into a conference room with three or four of us and hacked Lisp code for six weeks. He was a solid Lisp hacker. He stayed up late with us and wrote AI infrastructure for the experimental OS, then handed it off to me when he had to, as he put it, &quot;put his executive hat back on.&quot; He hung around with us brainstorming and arguing about ideas. He had us out to his house for dinner.<p>A little later, when things were hectic and pressure was high on Newton, one of our colleagues killed himself. Larry roamed the halls stopping to talk to people about how they were doing. I was at my desk when he came by, next to another colleague that I considered a friend. Larry stopped by to check on us. My friend had also been a good friend of the fellow who had died, and he lost his composure. Larry grabbed a chair, pulled it up close and sat with him, an arm around him, patting him gently while his grief ran its course.<p>After Newton was released, Larry moved on to other projects. I worked on the shipped product for a while, but I was pretty burned out. Steve Jobs persuaded me to go to work for NeXT for a little while.<p>Steve is infamous for being, let&#x27;s say, not as pleasant as Larry. In fact, he sat in my office once trashing Larry for about half an hour, for no good reason, as far as I can see. I politely disagreed with a number of his points. Larry made important contributions to the development of personal computing, and he didn&#x27;t have to be a jerk to do it.<p>Larry was extremely smart, but I never knew him to play I&#x27;m-smarter-than-you games. I saw him encourage other people to pursue, develop, and share their ideas. I found him eager to learn new things, and more interested in what good we could do than in who got the credit for it.<p>We weren&#x27;t close friends, except maybe when we were crammed in a conference room together for six weeks. I didn&#x27;t see him much after Newton, though we exchanged the occasional friendly email over the years.<p>I was just thinking lately that it was about time to say hello to him again. Oops.<p>Larry Tesler was one of the best people I met in Silicon Valley. He was one of the best people I&#x27;ve met, period. I&#x27;ll miss him.
评论 #22371287 未加载
评论 #22374607 未加载
评论 #22371714 未加载
评论 #22376153 未加载
评论 #22376403 未加载
alariccoleover 5 years ago
This breaks my heart. I used to work next to Larry—literally sat next to him—on Yahoo’s central design team. We were in frequent meetings together, but didn’t talk one-on-one often. One evening commuting from work, during one of many Caltrain failures, he noticed me as I waited outside the train and offered me a ride home. I remember sitting nervously in the car, a bit awestruck, and I finally got up the courage to ask him “Did you really invent copy and paste?!”<p>“Yes.”<p>From then on the ice was broken and we chatted more freely: fun discussions about the (then) up-and-coming voice recognition UIs (I compared them to CLIs which he liked), wearables, design, and cycling.<p>I consider him a friend. Didn’t expect us to lose him so soon.
评论 #22370907 未加载
评论 #22374166 未加载
Stratoscopeover 5 years ago
Oh my, Larry was only 74? That is far too young.<p>We were friends, off and on. Perhaps somewhat &quot;off&quot; after I stole his girlfriend. (In my defense, it was her idea!) But that was 35 years ago, and all was forgiven (and hopefully forgotten) in more recent years.<p>Here is Larry&#x27;s Smalltalk article from the August 1981 BYTE, complete with a photo of the famous T-shirt that a mutual friend made for him:<p><pre><code> DON&#x27;T MODE ME IN </code></pre> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;details&#x2F;byte-magazine-1981-08&#x2F;page&#x2F;n103&#x2F;mode&#x2F;1up" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;details&#x2F;byte-magazine-1981-08&#x2F;page&#x2F;n103&#x2F;...</a><p>A couple of other good articles:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gizmodo.com&#x2F;1841787408" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gizmodo.com&#x2F;1841787408</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;medium.com&#x2F;@kentbeck_7670&#x2F;larry-tesler-1945-2020-b910429f12eb" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;medium.com&#x2F;@kentbeck_7670&#x2F;larry-tesler-1945-2020-b91...</a>
dmazinover 5 years ago
He gave us so much more than cut, copy, paste. It&#x27;s clear from all the design history books that I&#x27;ve read that he&#x27;s a legend.[1]<p>NO MODES!<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;itsthedatastupid.files.wordpress.com&#x2F;2010&#x2F;05&#x2F;nomodes.jpg" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;itsthedatastupid.files.wordpress.com&#x2F;2010&#x2F;05&#x2F;nomodes...</a><p>[1] One of the more rare sources for Larry Tesler&#x27;s contributions is his interview for Bill Moggridge&#x27;s Designing Interactions (<a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.designinginteractions.com&#x2F;interviews&#x2F;LarryTesler" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.designinginteractions.com&#x2F;interviews&#x2F;LarryTesler</a>)
评论 #22369523 未加载
评论 #22370462 未加载
评论 #22371488 未加载
评论 #22370720 未加载
评论 #22371257 未加载
ChuckMcMover 5 years ago
Larry was a great thinker. I got to discuss &quot;vi vs. emacs&quot; at one of the Fellows induction ceremonies held at the Computer History Museum. He could easily articulate counter cases and keep the discussion both productive and quite civil!<p>I first met him while I was visiting my wife at her office in Xerox Business Systems (XBS). He came over to discuss some suggestions to improve the protocol she was working on. I thought he was one of her co-workers because the discussion was very peer to peer as opposed to top down. She corrected me to point out he was one of the movers and shakers at PARC. That left a very positive impression on me.<p>He was also &quot;the other Larry&quot; at Xerox. Larry Garlick, who was also &quot;Larry&quot; to most people, was also at XBS (as was Eric Schmidt) and later followed Eric over to Sun.
评论 #22373077 未加载
评论 #22372266 未加载
评论 #22370356 未加载
linguaeover 5 years ago
I was just eating lunch across the street from Apple&#x27;s headquarters in Cupertino when I read the news.<p>The John Sculley era of Apple has received a lot of criticism. With that being said, one of the aspects of this era that I&#x27;m most impressed with is the work that came out of Apple&#x27;s Advanced Technology Group. During this time period Apple was serious about advancing the state of research in the areas of programming languages, systems software, and human-computer interaction. There were many great people that were part of this group, including Larry Tesler and Don Norman. I completely understand why Steve Jobs shut down this group in 1997; times were rough for Apple, and the company couldn&#x27;t afford to do research when its core business was in dire straits. But I wish Apple revived this group when its fortunes changed, and I also wish Apple still had the focus on usability and improving the personal computing experience that it had in the 1980s and 1990s.
评论 #22371233 未加载
评论 #22371889 未加载
评论 #22377358 未加载
mark_l_watsonover 5 years ago
I am sorry to hear that. I once had lunch with him and John Koza (pioneer in genetic programming) around the 1994 time period.<p>Larry had the first book I wrote (Common Lisp book for Springer Verlag) and in a good natured way was trying to talk me into writing a book on Dylan. We kept in touch but I didn’t write a Dylan book. Talking with him and John for an hour was like getting a year’s worth of good ideas tossed at you, all at once.
svatover 5 years ago
In the late 1960s&#x2F;early 1970s, before he went to Xerox PARC and Apple, Larry Tesler wrote an early document system (page formatter) called PUB, for use by other computer programmers at the Stanford AI Lab (SAIL). He has put up the old manual online at <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nomodes.com&#x2F;pub_manual.html" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nomodes.com&#x2F;pub_manual.html</a> with some modern annotations. This PUB was influential in at least two ways:<p>- It was Donald Knuth&#x27;s first introduction to computer typesetting, and he used to use this program as a convenient way to prepare errata for <i>The Art of Computer Programming</i> on a computer, and hand out the resulting printouts. (At that time he was thinking of computer tools as something like typewriters and in no way related to &quot;real book printing&quot;, until he saw the result of a &quot;real&quot; digital typesetter in 1977, which inspired him to write TeX.) In 2012 when he learned of this manual he wrote in TUGboat strongly recommending it to others: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tug.org&#x2F;TUGboat&#x2F;tb33-3&#x2F;tb105knut.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tug.org&#x2F;TUGboat&#x2F;tb33-3&#x2F;tb105knut.pdf</a><p>- Another of its users was Brian Reid, who went on to develop Scribe, which itself was influential in two ways: (1) It was a strong influence on Leslie Lamport&#x27;s LaTeX (in fact LaTeX can be viewed as bringing Scribe syntax&#x2F;ideas to TeX), and (2) It seems to have been influential in the development of markup languages in general, e.g. from GML to SGML (this part I&#x27;m not sure of and there are conflicting accounts), which eventually led to HTML and XML. In fact it would have been better than XML according to Douglas Crockford here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;nofluffjuststuff.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;douglas_crockford&#x2F;2007&#x2F;06&#x2F;scribe" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;nofluffjuststuff.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;douglas_crockford&#x2F;2007&#x2F;06&#x2F;...</a><p>Here&#x27;s an 8-minute video of him accepting an award at a SAIL reunion (I think) for his work on PUB: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;exhibits.stanford.edu&#x2F;ai&#x2F;catalog&#x2F;sj202sv1949" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;exhibits.stanford.edu&#x2F;ai&#x2F;catalog&#x2F;sj202sv1949</a> (with some audience comments by John McCarthy and a joke by Knuth).
Scobleizerover 5 years ago
Two tech legends left us this week: Larry Tesler and Bert Sutherland. Both played key roles at PARC, the research center Xerox started that sparked large chunks of what we use today.<p>Regarding Tesler: I sat next to him when I flew back from interviewing at Microsoft. He was in the last row on the plane. I saw his Blackberry, assumed he was a nerd. He had just left Apple, was on the committee that hired Steve Jobs. He had his fingers in so much of the tech that we use today from object oriented programming to the Newton that set the stage for the iPhone.<p>Sutherland participated in the creation of the personal computer, the tech of microprocessors, the Smalltalk and Java programming languages, and much more.<p>Huge losses for our industry.
评论 #22369984 未加载
bobbiechenover 5 years ago
Rest in peace. It&#x27;s incredible how young computing is, many of his contributions are so fundamental.<p>From a guest lecture Larry Tesler gave at CMU in 2014 [1]:<p><i>Click to select an insertion point. Double click to select a word. Click and drag to select a passage. All of those were new. Type to replace the selection by new text [...] I think that was not unprecedented, but it wasn’t common. Cut to move the selection to a buffer, Pentti Kanurva had done it, tvedit. Paste to replace the selection by the buffer. Again, Pentti had done that [...] Control B to bold the selection, I and U and so on [...] All of these things were introduced in Gypsy, 1975.</i><p>Gypsy: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Gypsy_(software)" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Gypsy_(software)</a><p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;scs.hosted.panopto.com&#x2F;Panopto&#x2F;Pages&#x2F;Viewer.aspx?id=e6adfb43-be90-46b3-9009-23cd98b7a898" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;scs.hosted.panopto.com&#x2F;Panopto&#x2F;Pages&#x2F;Viewer.aspx?id=...</a>
aresantover 5 years ago
A career in full from his own CV:<p>&quot;Board director for a FTSE 250 company, vp in three Fortune 500 corporations, president of two small software firms. 32 years building and managing teams of software and hardware engineers, designers, researchers, scientists, product managers and marketers to deliver innovative customer-centered products.&quot;<p><a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nomodes.com&#x2F;Tesler_CV_Public.pdf" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nomodes.com&#x2F;Tesler_CV_Public.pdf</a>
评论 #22371104 未加载
评论 #22371544 未加载
loquorover 5 years ago
I remember his mention in Bret Victor&#x27;s talk, Inventing on Principle. He is known for cut copy paste, but he did far more than that. He introduced a single &#x27;mode&#x27; for working for docs, as opposed to having typing, editing, formatting modes. He lived his entire life by the &#x27;nomodes&#x27; ethos; that&#x27;s his twitter handle to boot. I really respect that.
mc3over 5 years ago
I&#x27;m bad at names, so I didn&#x27;t know the name, but followed the Wikipedia link and saw he was the &quot;modeless&quot; advocate, and I learned about that from this awesome Bret Victor talk: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;vimeo.com&#x2F;36579366" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;vimeo.com&#x2F;36579366</a>. Someone has commented to forward to 38 minutes to hear it.<p>That Bret Victor talk still influences me today, so please watch it I think it&#x27;ll help you if you haven&#x27;t watched it already.
samatmanover 5 years ago
Wow <i>serious</i> Baader-Meinhof effect!<p>I recently downloaded all the PDFs from <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;worrydream.com&#x2F;refs&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;worrydream.com&#x2F;refs&#x2F;</a>, and was reading Larry Tesler&#x27;s <i>A Personal History of Modeless Text Editing and Cut-Copy-Paste</i> on my flight Monday.<p>It&#x27;s a good paper, you can find it at the link above if you&#x27;re in the mood to read it <i>in memoriam</i>.
sheriover 5 years ago
I was in college, and attended a career fair for Amazon back in 2002. I was not in my last year so I really went just for free food. It was quite sparse, and after a while one guy with a friendly smile just walked up to me and said &quot;Hi, I&#x27;m Larry&quot;. We talked a little bit about my background, about Amazon and opportunities there. I felt like I was a hotshot at the time, and quite frankly didn&#x27;t. Only after I went back to my dorm and looked him up did I realize who I was talking to.<p>He was super humble, super nice. I acted like a jerk, thinking I was hot stuff and everybody was there to court me and was there just for free pizza. Despite being infinitely more accomplished than I could ever be, he was nice, engaging and never treated me in kind.<p>Every so often I think back to that time and kick myself at the lost opportunity to have a conversation with one of the legends of Silicon Valley.<p>Thank you Larry.
GuiAover 5 years ago
A reminder that our industry is very young still, and many who laid its foundations are still with us today, but won’t be forever.<p>There is no better time than now for collecting oral history, interviewing people, asking them about their stories, etc. All of this knowledge and stories can get lost very very fast.
评论 #22369947 未加载
评论 #22370016 未加载
tobrover 5 years ago
Larry Tesler was really convinced of the merits of modeless interfaces. He even got “NOMODES” on his license plate.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;queeniehui.wordpress.com&#x2F;2013&#x2F;10&#x2F;03&#x2F;designing-interactions-review-part-1&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;queeniehui.wordpress.com&#x2F;2013&#x2F;10&#x2F;03&#x2F;designing-intera...</a>
评论 #22372284 未加载
musicaleover 5 years ago
Very sad, Larry Tesler was brilliant and an inspiration.<p>Smalltalk, copy-and-paste, the Apple Lisa&#x2F;Macintosh and Newton, Object Pascal (predecessor of Delphi), Stagecast Creator... NO MODES. ;-)<p>Pretty sure there isn&#x27;t any bit of personal computing that Larry Tesler couldn&#x27;t (or didn&#x27;t) help make better somehow.
gdubsover 5 years ago
Sad news; total legend. folklore.org has a lot of stories featuring Larry — short stories on an era of computing that has faded around the edges. RIP.
LanceKlassover 5 years ago
This posting and Larry&#x27;s obit take me back to the math applications class we took at Bronx Science our senior year. Writing a program for the IBM 640 (yes, the 640), coding the IBN cards ourselves and then the fateful experience of loading the program cards into the reader for the 640 was a scary experience. Larry&#x27;s program apparently did primes while mine did the Fibonacci series. Then the 640, the size of a modern SUV, chugged away all night and the next day it generated voluminous print-out&#x27;s, lots and lots of paper. What fun!<p>After graduation he went off to Stamford to continue math - and programming - and I went elsewhere for liberal arts. But no matter, I couldn&#x27;t have done what Larry did or create what he created.<p>I remember him as a great guy, very mellow, and if memory serves he was on the track team as well. Perfect for Stanford. Apparently he affected those he worked with the same way he affected me - an easy-going guy, friendly, positive, ready to smile. I know he&#x27;ll be missed greatly.
dreamcompilerover 5 years ago
I&#x27;m very sorry to hear this. He was the instigator of Dylan and it&#x27;s not wrong to say there would be no Clozure Common Lisp (my preferred development platform) today if not for Larry Tesler.
suyashover 5 years ago
RIP Larry Tesler, I ran into him a few times at meetup events in Bay Area, few people knew who he was as he kept a very low profile.
评论 #22370357 未加载
alankayover 5 years ago
A very nice remembrance by John Markoff in the NYTimes: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;mail.yahoo.com&#x2F;d&#x2F;folders&#x2F;1&#x2F;messages&#x2F;AOkUKy0vu8HQXk9uOwZooDufhaU?reason=invalid_cred" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;mail.yahoo.com&#x2F;d&#x2F;folders&#x2F;1&#x2F;messages&#x2F;AOkUKy0vu8HQXk9u...</a>
评论 #22381378 未加载
spullaraover 5 years ago
One of the strangest moments in my career was Larry asking me for career advice when we were both at Yahoo; I think because I had been an IC for really long time and had figured out how to leverage that into strategic positions. Great man with incredible accomplishments.
bsimpsonover 5 years ago
I&#x27;ve been meaning to watch one of his presentations for a while: &quot;Origins of the Apple Human Interface&quot;<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=OW-atKrg0T4" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=OW-atKrg0T4</a>
drallisonover 5 years ago
Obits in the national press:<p>NYT: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2020&#x2F;02&#x2F;20&#x2F;technology&#x2F;lawrence-tesler-dead.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2020&#x2F;02&#x2F;20&#x2F;technology&#x2F;lawrence-tesle...</a><p>WAPO: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.washingtonpost.com&#x2F;local&#x2F;obituaries&#x2F;larry-tesler-inventor-of-copy-and-paste-computer-functions-dies-at-74&#x2F;2020&#x2F;02&#x2F;20&#x2F;e5699f6e-541c-11ea-9e47-59804be1dcfb_story.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.washingtonpost.com&#x2F;local&#x2F;obituaries&#x2F;larry-tesler...</a>
ColinWrightover 5 years ago
Also here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=22367558" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=22367558</a>
astatineover 5 years ago
RIP Larry Tesler. I rather feel a worm for not being aware of him till today. Nevertheless, hearing the many personal stories here on HN of his work, humility and graciousness, make me thankful for him and his tribe that have made the software profession so much more richer.
billmanover 5 years ago
Wow. I didn&#x27;t realize how influential the Bronx High School of Science was:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;List_of_Bronx_High_School_of_Science_alumni" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;List_of_Bronx_High_School_of_S...</a>
marai2over 5 years ago
From his resume:<p>1962-1964 Stanford University Departments of Genetics and Computer Science programmer
davidhaririover 5 years ago
I didn’t know of Larry Tesler, but reading the comments makes me want to lead like he did. Looking forward to learning more about his life. My condolences to his friends here.
dazrafioover 5 years ago
So long our dear friend Larry. You have been such an inspiration. Amongst other achievements, the Newton is still such an incredible machine (and love Dylan)
kristianpover 5 years ago
There&#x27;s one thing on his wikipedia page which I think is probably wrong: I don&#x27;t think Wirth had any involvement with Object Pascal.
评论 #22371086 未加载
Temporaover 5 years ago
RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP. RIP.
pgtover 5 years ago
I loved Larry Tesler’s work. No modes!
dkonofalskiover 5 years ago
Is it possible for the HN staff to put a rollover on the black bar or link it to threads like this. I see an uptick in the &quot;why is there a black bar?&quot; threads every time it goes up and it would be nice to acknowledge the people that have contributed to technology and spread awareness of what they&#x27;ve done for people that might not know.
burnJSover 5 years ago
Don&#x27;t mode me bro.
mister_hnover 5 years ago
Never heard about him here in EU
bandramiover 5 years ago
Larry Tesler has died (gizmodo.com)<p>1179 points by drallison 23 hours ago | flag | hide | past | web | favorite | 131 comments
ckapsover 5 years ago
What
kianigreycliffover 5 years ago
rest in peace
netuser1over 5 years ago
Thank you, Larry.
lukaseratover 5 years ago
:(
ytersover 5 years ago
Wow reading the comments sounds like actually a great human being. Help me realize being a jerk is an anti pattern, even though I am sometimes tempted to think otherwise.
tus88over 5 years ago
Surprised I have not heard of him. He seems quite significant.
jakelazaroffover 5 years ago
Tangentially related question: is this why HN currently has a black bar above the navigation? To commemorate his death?
评论 #22370510 未加载
评论 #22370482 未加载
falcor84over 5 years ago
I couldn&#x27;t find any corroboration of this. What happened?
评论 #22366813 未加载
justlexi93over 5 years ago
Tesler spent 17 years at Apple, rising to chief scientist.<p>He went on to establish an education startup and do stints in user-experience technology at Amazon and Yahoo.
OrgNetover 5 years ago
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;imgur.com&#x2F;KX9IJEV.png" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;imgur.com&#x2F;KX9IJEV.png</a>
3fe9a03ccd14ca5over 5 years ago
Does anyone else find it strange that there’s rarely any mention of cause of death in Wikipedia? Is it uncouth to ask how someone passed away?
评论 #22380970 未加载
评论 #22372572 未加载