Calling her "the grandmother of the data centre" (original article's title) seems like a really dumb way of wording what she is famous for...<p>You could call her a popular author and key person in UNIX networking, but for all we know she has never worked a day in a "data centre" in her life, unless we're going to expand the definition to any room with computers in it (or servers?).<p>I am really not trying to foofoo this, her going missing is bad news, and she created some really key books, I just dislike the way the title/article tries to spin it so it makes sense to the lowest common denominator - while also completely mischaracterizing what it is she is even famous for.