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Oral History of Dave Cutler Part 2 

Computer History Museum
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Interviewed by Grant Saviers on 2016-02-25 in Medina, WA X7733.2016
© Computer History Museum
Dave Cutler (Microsoft Senior Technical Fellow) reviews his youth and never having touched a computer even through college. He then joined Dupont as a technical writer and became interested in developing a GPSS application for a Dupont customer. That led to his volunteering to fix bugs in EXEC-II operating system on the Univac 1108 at Dupont Research Station and his first exposure to computer operating systems. Knowing that computer operating systems were what he wanted to do, he then joined Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) and developed several versions of the PDP-11 RSX-11 operating system and a PL-1 compiler. He was a key member of the VAX architecture development group and led the development of VMS including doing much of the coding himself.
Frustrations with DEC management indecision about the future of processor architectures and operating systems led to his establishment of the DECwest Research Center in Seattle with support from Gordon Bell. Dave assembled a large team to develop a VAX successor to RISC machine and VMS successor operating system (Mica and Prism).
Subsequent to DEC cancelling those projects and some efforts with his colleges towards starting his own company, Dave joined Microsoft at the urging of Steve Ballmer. There he developed the NT operating system, navigating multiple user interface additions, porting to several processor platforms and producing several releases. NT is currently the kernal of all Microsoft O/S.
Following NT Dave changed his focus and made significant contributions to the Azure cloud computing environment. Dave discusses his management style and philosophy of software development and some analogies to his career of racing high performance cars. He reflects on the state of processor development and the future of major operating systems.
Currently, he is contributing to the X-Box after developing the hypervisor for that product line. Dave is a recipient of the National Medal of Technology and Innovation, a Fellow of the Computer History Museum and a member of the National Academy of Engineering. Many consider Dave Cutler one of the computer industry’s most preeminent and prolific engineers.
* Note: Transcripts represent what was said in the interview. However, to enhance meaning or add clarification, interviewees have the opportunity to modify this text afterward. This may result in discrepancies between the transcript and the video. Please refer to the transcript for further information - www.computerhis...
Visit computerhistory.org/collections/oralhistories/ for more information about the Computer History Museum's Oral History Collection.
Lot number: X7733.2016
Catalog number: 102717162

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22 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 25   
@James_Bowie
@James_Bowie 2 года назад
Dave Cutler's generation was raised writing code on machines with tiny memories. That discipline makes you code economically. It's a state of mind that never leaves you.
@ttutankhamon86
@ttutankhamon86 4 года назад
Not necessarily every topic, but stuff more relevant to me, and probably to others: 07:10 comparison between racing and writing code 9:22 fixing bug philosophy 13:44 NT security issues: buffer overflows 15:56 getting programmers to produce good code 18:20 NT's shipment + Windows 95 code base being used in Win 98 and Millenium + notes on security 29:12 Windows 2k 34:00 Start of transition to 64 bit code (already in Win Server 2003 code base) 36:18 Longhorn fiasco and how Vista was born 38:27 back to Windows XP and the creation of SP2 40:00 RISC disappearance and why + ARM 44:55 Multi-processing (MP) support and where it started 50:20 Vista shipment and transition to Azure 51:25 Azure and challenges 57:20 XBox and security 1:16:53 Current State of AI
@rabidbigdog
@rabidbigdog Год назад
AMD reaching out to Cutler with their 64-bit extensions was genius.
@AllMyHobbies
@AllMyHobbies 3 года назад
he was correct when he said server 2000 was solid. having been running it in production servers for now more then 20 years still rock solid
@RoyAntaw
@RoyAntaw 5 лет назад
Thank you for VMS and NT. I was sixteen when I saw my first 11/780 which later became a part of my professional life, six years later.. VAX 11/780 and later a MicroVax 4000 VMS for data reduction in a scientific role and later NT in a commercial environment. I still run a VMS system with a Hobbyist License from HP on 10 Core 20 Thread system with Windows 10 machine using SIMH. Thanks Dave for making this all possible.... Also in the mid 90's I worked for Microsoft Australia Supporting VBA, VB and Access Professional Users.
@rabidbigdog
@rabidbigdog 4 года назад
Same feelings here. My professional life has been many PDP11, then VAXen and of course Windows NT-family.
@rabidbigdog
@rabidbigdog 4 года назад
I met Dave at a Mill event in the early 1980s - he was genuinely interested in what our clients were doing with VMS in Australia. Its hard to grasp the passion of people like this. Thank you CHM.
@tigros999
@tigros999 5 лет назад
guys like this are the real stars, actors have no clue heh i'd like to see an interview with Tom Miller from MS also, he wrote alot of the Windows cache system which is super complex and helps us all alot!
@wkoszek
@wkoszek 4 года назад
We need more interviews like this.
@sabertoothwolf2474
@sabertoothwolf2474 4 года назад
National treasure Dave is! Wish I could meet him one day...
@judewestburner
@judewestburner 9 месяцев назад
We're lucky to have NT. I didn't know the world was gonna go like this but NT is the only non UNIX alternative out there.
@ScienceAppliedForGood
@ScienceAppliedForGood Год назад
Thanks for sharing the transcript. It was really helpful.
@naikrovek
@naikrovek Год назад
There is so much I would ask Dave if I had some of his time. My god.
@rdubb77
@rdubb77 3 года назад
"..which continued with Windows Millenium, which I believe was in 2000." Spoken like a true programmer.
@m1k3e
@m1k3e 2 года назад
43:36 “ARM is not anywhere near the performance capability of the x86 stuff…” 😁😁😁
@karltraunmuller7048
@karltraunmuller7048 5 лет назад
Very interesting, thanks for sharing!
@swyxTV
@swyxTV 4 года назад
52:00 he starts talking Azure and Xbox
@jaakkohaakana7765
@jaakkohaakana7765 2 года назад
Interesting for him to ignore iOS when discussing operating systems. I guess he was thinking of open systems.
@rafaelclaycon
@rafaelclaycon 2 года назад
43:00 His take on RISC didn’t age very well, huh
@stephenjacks8196
@stephenjacks8196 2 месяца назад
Skipped NT 3.5 and NT 3.51?
@nirv
@nirv 3 года назад
16:56 same here. Work. Why can't you work like a normal machine?!
@swyxTV
@swyxTV 4 года назад
48:40 DOGGO
@rabidbigdog
@rabidbigdog 4 года назад
Haha, it's a cat?
@James_Bowie
@James_Bowie 2 года назад
Want to drastically reduce bugs? Don't code in C.
@smellysam
@smellysam 3 года назад
Does that mean the new Xbox will brick itself when one of my kids stuff something into the optical drive and I try to repair it? This is nuts, cancelled plans to buy one.
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