Old programmers that developed in machine code and Assembly

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trident
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Old programmers that developed in machine code and Assembly

Post by trident »

All programmers that developed in machine code and Assembly in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s died?
StudlyCaps
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Re: Old programmers that developed in machine code and Assem

Post by StudlyCaps »

trident wrote:All programmers that developed in machine code and Assembly in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s died?
No, Ken Thompson for example, he developed one of the first computer games "Spacewar" in the late 60's and was one of the initial developers of Unix. He currently works for Google on the Go language.

With all due respect though, this is a pretty pointless question. There were literally 10's thousands of people who programmed computers between the 40's and 70's and most would have done at least some assembly. Lots are dead, some are not. Maybe next time say why you're interested.
trident
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Re: Old programmers that developed in machine code and Assem

Post by trident »

StudlyCaps wrote:
trident wrote:All programmers that developed in machine code and Assembly in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s died?
No, Ken Thompson for example, he developed one of the first computer games "Spacewar" in the late 60's and was one of the initial developers of Unix. He currently works for Google on the Go language.

With all due respect though, this is a pretty pointless question. There were literally 10's thousands of people who programmed computers between the 40's and 70's and most would have done at least some assembly. Lots are dead, some are not. Maybe next time say why you're interested.
@StudlyCaps,

I am curious.

The majority of programmers that developed in machine code and Assembly in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s died?
alexfru
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Re: Old programmers that developed in machine code and Assem

Post by alexfru »

trident wrote:The majority of programmers that developed in machine code and Assembly in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s died?
Most of the people born around 1950 have died.
Graph: Human life expectancy at birth, measured by region, between 1950 and 2050
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nullplan
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Re: Old programmers that developed in machine code and Assem

Post by nullplan »

I was tempted to answer at first (seriously, just use elementary arithmetic to arrive at the fact that people who were old enough to do anything commercially in 1940 probably aren't around anymore), but then I looked up the OP. I thought you wanted to be deleted, trident? What's with your obsession with machine language, anyway? It's just assembly that is less convenient to read.
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trident
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Re: Old programmers that developed in machine code and Assem

Post by trident »

@Schol-R-LEA, @DavidCooper, @Solar, please, answer this topic.
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Schol-R-LEA
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Re: Old programmers that developed in machine code and Assem

Post by Schol-R-LEA »

trident wrote:@Schol-R-LEA, @DavidCooper, @Solar, please, answer this topic.
At this point, you have had the all of the answers on this anyone can give, and your persistence is turning into harassment. Mods, please lock this thread.
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