Обсуждение: "A huge debt of gratitude" - Michael Stonebraker

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"A huge debt of gratitude" - Michael Stonebraker

От
Jolly Chen
Дата:
Hey everyone,

You have probably heard that Mike Stonebraker recently won the Turing award.  A recording of his award lecture is
availableat: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbGeKi6T6QI

It is an entertaining talk overall. If you fast forward to about the 1:07 mark, he makes some comments about postgres.

Here’s my rough transcription:

"The abstract data type system in postgres has been added to a lot of relational database systems. It's kind of de
factotable stakes for relational databases these days, essentially intact.  That idea was really a good one. It was
mentionedin the citation for my Turing award winning.  However, serendipity played a huge role, which is, the biggest
impactof postgres by far came from two Berkeley students that I'll affectionately call Grumpy and Sleepy.  They
convertedthe academic postgres prototype from QUEL to SQL in 1995. This was in parallel to the commercial activity. And
thena pick-up team of volunteers, none of whom have anything to do with me or Berkeley, have been shepherding that open
sourcesystem ever since 1995. The system that you get off the web for postgres comes from this pick-up team.  It is
opensource at its best and I want to just mention that I have nothing to do with that and that collection of folks we
allowe a huge debt of gratitude to, because they have robustize that code line and made it so it really works.” 

Thank you all so much for your hard work over the last twenty years!!

Affectionately,

Grumpy




Re: "A huge debt of gratitude" - Michael Stonebraker

От
Robert Haas
Дата:
On Tue, Jul 21, 2015 at 6:42 PM, Jolly Chen <jolly@chenfamily.com> wrote:
> You have probably heard that Mike Stonebraker recently won the Turing award.  A recording of his award lecture is
availableat: 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbGeKi6T6QI
>
> It is an entertaining talk overall. If you fast forward to about the 1:07 mark, he makes some comments about
postgres.
>
> Here’s my rough transcription:
>
> "The abstract data type system in postgres has been added to a lot of relational database systems. It's kind of de
factotable stakes for relational databases these days, essentially intact.  That idea was really a good one. It was
mentionedin the citation for my Turing award winning.  However, serendipity played a huge role, which is, the biggest
impactof postgres by far came from two Berkeley students that I'll affectionately call Grumpy and Sleepy.  They
convertedthe academic postgres prototype from QUEL to SQL in 1995. This was in parallel to the commercial activity. And
thena pick-up team of volunteers, none of whom have anything to do with me or Berkeley, have been shepherding that open
sourcesystem ever since 1995. The system that you get off the web for postgres comes from this pick-up team.  It is
opensource at its best and I want to just mention that I have nothing to do with that and that collection of folks we
allowe a huge debt of gratitude to, because they have robustize that code line and made it so it really works.” 
>
> Thank you all so much for your hard work over the last twenty years!!

Wow, thanks for reaching out.  Here is a quote from the current
version of src/test/regress/input/misc.source:

--
-- BTREE shutting out non-functional updates
--
-- the following two tests seem to take a long time on some
-- systems.    This non-func update stuff needs to be examined
-- more closely.                        - jolly (2/22/96)
--

That comment might be obsolete, but we still have it, and a few other
references.  :-)

--
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company



Re: "A huge debt of gratitude" - Michael Stonebraker

От
Gurjeet Singh
Дата:
<p dir="ltr"><br /> On Jul 22, 2015 12:07 PM, "Jolly Chen" <<a
href="mailto:jolly@chenfamily.com">jolly@chenfamily.com</a>>wrote:<br /> ><br /> > Hey everyone,<br /> ><br
/>> You have probably heard that Mike Stonebraker recently won the Turing award.  A recording of his award lecture
isavailable at:<br /> > <a
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbGeKi6T6QI">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbGeKi6T6QI</a><br/> ><br /> >
Itis an entertaining talk overall. If you fast forward to about the 1:07 mark, he makes some comments about
postgres.<br/> ><br /> > Here’s my rough transcription:<br /> ><br /> > "The abstract data type system in
postgreshas been added to a lot of relational database systems. It's kind of de facto table stakes for relational
databasesthese days, essentially intact.  That idea was really a good one. It was mentioned in the citation for my
Turingaward winning.  However, serendipity played a huge role, which is, the biggest impact of postgres by far came
fromtwo Berkeley students that I'll affectionately call Grumpy and Sleepy.  They converted the academic postgres
prototypefrom QUEL to SQL in 1995. This was in parallel to the commercial activity. And then a pick-up team of
volunteers,none of whom have anything to do with me or Berkeley, have been shepherding that open source system ever
since1995. The system that you get off the web for postgres comes from this pick-up team.  It is open source at its
bestand I want to just mention that I have nothing to do with that and that collection of folks we all owe a huge debt
ofgratitude to, because they have robustize that code line and made it so it really works.”<br /> ><br /> > Thank
youall so much for your hard work over the last twenty years!!<br /> ><br /> > Affectionately,<br /> ><br />
>Grumpy<p dir="ltr">Thank you! And a big thanks to the stewards of the project.<p dir="ltr">Sincerely,<br /> 

Re: "A huge debt of gratitude" - Michael Stonebraker

От
Oleg Bartunov
Дата:
<div dir="ltr">Nice to hear you again Jolly !<br /></div><div class="gmail_extra"><br /><div class="gmail_quote">On
Wed,Jul 22, 2015 at 1:42 AM, Jolly Chen <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:jolly@chenfamily.com"
target="_blank">jolly@chenfamily.com</a>></span>wrote:<br /><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0
.8ex;border-left:1px#ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">Hey everyone,<br /><br /> You have probably heard that Mike
Stonebrakerrecently won the Turing award.  A recording of his award lecture is available at:<br /><a
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbGeKi6T6QI"rel="noreferrer"
target="_blank">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbGeKi6T6QI</a><br/><br /> It is an entertaining talk overall. If you
fastforward to about the 1:07 mark, he makes some comments about postgres.<br /><br /> Here’s my rough
transcription:<br/><br /> "The abstract data type system in postgres has been added to a lot of relational database
systems.It's kind of de facto table stakes for relational databases these days, essentially intact.  That idea was
reallya good one. It was mentioned in the citation for my Turing award winning.  However, serendipity played a huge
role,which is, the biggest impact of postgres by far came from two Berkeley students that I'll affectionately call
Grumpyand Sleepy.  They converted the academic postgres prototype from QUEL to SQL in 1995. This was in parallel to the
commercialactivity. And then a pick-up team of volunteers, none of whom have anything to do with me or Berkeley, have
beenshepherding that open source system ever since 1995. The system that you get off the web for postgres comes from
thispick-up team.  It is open source at its best and I want to just mention that I have nothing to do with that and
thatcollection of folks we all owe a huge debt of gratitude to, because they have robustize that code line and made it
soit really works.”<br /><br /> Thank you all so much for your hard work over the last twenty years!!<br /><br />
Affectionately,<br/><br /> Grumpy<br /><span class="HOEnZb"><font color="#888888"><br /><br /><br /> --<br /> Sent via
pgsql-hackersmailing list (<a href="mailto:pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org">pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org</a>)<br /> To
makechanges to your subscription:<br /><a href="http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers" rel="noreferrer"
target="_blank">http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers</a><br/></font></span></blockquote></div><br /></div>