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- This is the eulogy delivered at the memorial service Friday, July 15, for
- Gary Killdall. It was delivered by Thomas A. Rolander.
-
- =======================================================================
- In Memory of
-
- GARY A. KILDALL
-
- May 19, 1942 -- July 11, 1994
-
-
- Memorial Service
- July 15, 1994
- Naval Postgraduate School
- Monterey, California
-
-
-
- Greeting
- --------
-
- On behalf of Kristin, Scott, and the Kildall family I
- welcome you to this memorial service for Gary Kildall.
- Today we will pay tribute to the accomplishments and life
- of Gary Kildall.
-
-
-
- Gary Kildall was a pioneer who brought
- order into the early chaos of the PC
- industry by providing focus, leadership
- and vision. In a competitive, often
- impersonal microcomputer industry,
- Gary showed us that friends and business
- associates are one and the same. His
- family and friends will long remember him.
-
-
-
- Eulogy
- ------
-
-
- I must begin this talk by admitting to you that this is the
- most difficult task that I have ever done in my life. I am an
- enthusiastic high energy person usually operating at about
- 100 Mhz. Giving a eulogy is not something which fits very
- well with my personality, or that I have been prepared to
- do. It is, however, something I want to do with all my
- heart.
-
- Gary Kildall was the best male friend I have ever had in
- my life. I trusted him implicitly, with my life and my
- work.
-
- Let me tell you about the Gary I knew and loved as viewed
- through my eyes and with my heart. I've often been
- accused of being entirely too cheerful, even a "Pollyanna",
- seeing only the good in people. This may tell you
- something about being chosen as one of Gary's close
- friends.
-
- Gary was the biggest "kid" I've ever known. He had a
- child-like enthusiasm which was obvious in his work and
- recreation. A man with a multitude of toys from airplanes,
- to cars, boats, motorcycles, and yes, computers too. I
- couldn't express it better myself than on the front cover of
- the first issue of Byte Magazine in September of 1975
- which carried the headline,
- "COMPUTERS- the World's Greatest Toy!"
- Gary was on to something long before there was a
- Nintendo or Sega. Creating programs is a lot of fun.
-
- Gary was a man of many passions, he was warm and open
- to those he loved, I shared many of his passions and I will
- share some of them with you.
-
- Gary had a wonderful way of calmly and patiently guiding
- my enthusiasm, especially for computer technology and
- flying. During the often frantic hours of preparation for a
- tradeshow or a customer visit I would literally run in
- circles from one task to another until I realized that Gary
- was standing in the middle of that circle smiling at me,
- waiting for me to notice him and then he would calmly
- suggest that I take a deep breath and slow down. Gary
- always had the confidence that the tasks would be
- completed, and that gave me confidence in myself. We all
- know what we can accomplish when we believe in
- ourselves, and Gary taught me that confidence.
-
- I have frequently heard it said that you can learn a lot about
- a person by playing golf with them. Living here on the
- Monterey peninsula and not being a golfer may be some
- form of misdemeanor. But, Gary and I shared something
- even better than golfing, we flew together. I believe that
- you can learn even more about a person by flying with
- them. I have been Gary's co-pilot for over 1,000 hours and
- that is where I learned the most about him. He was
- passionate about flying and loved the aircraft he flew.
-
- As I wrote this eulogy I came to the realization that there
- were a lot of parallels between the way Gary flew and the
- way he programmed. The first parallel that came to mind
- was his planning ahead before a flight. Gary was very
- methodical before every trip, whether we were going out
- for a brief bit of aerobatics in his Pitts biplane, or flying
- across the country to Boston in the twin-engine Aerostar.
- While my own personality would have prompted more
- spontaneous departures, Gary's would always be done after
- detailed weather briefings, fuel loading, and weight and
- balance calculations. Gary's programming was just as
- methodical. It always began with complete and detailed
- sketches of data structures on large sheets of paper. The
- coding never began until he had visualized and
- comprehended the overall design.
-
- The second parallel was the flight itself. From the preflight
- to landing, Gary was a consumate professional in his
- flying, paying attention to every detail and never getting
- flustered. He was always calm, confident, and equally
- demanding of detail from his co-pilot. He would have me
- rehearse my ATC transmissions over and over so that I
- would sound like a professional. After all, we were flying
- up at 25,000 feet close to the big commercial jet traffic.
-
- Gary paid just as much attention to detail in his
- programming. Unlike other designers who are often
- content to paint the broad picture and then let the more
- junior programmers fill in the details, Gary designed,
- implemented and debugged his products.
-
- Gary frequently talked about the pleasure of watching the
- earth slip beneath our feet as we crossed the country,
- sometimes in excited conversation and other times silent
- for hour upon hour in awe at the beauty and uniqueness of
- the country we saw. On numerous occasions at night he
- would turn off all the cockpit and instrument lights so that
- we could watch the stars and the distant city lights.
-
- Gary frequently talked about the pleasure of completing
- the programs he'd written. He called me at some of the
- strangest times to come see his programs run for the first
- time. This was an infectious enthusiasm that he always
- shared about his work. Gary was a pioneer, in the best
- meaning of the word, who truly enjoyed creating new
- products.
-
- Gary was a man of responsibility and calculated risks.
- This applied to his flying as well as his work. I can
- remember his anxiety during the early days of Digital
- Research because he felt responsible for the livelihood of
- the new employees during the growth of the company. I
- remember his discomfort when he no longer knew the
- names of all the new employees. He felt that same
- responsibility about his flying. I can distinctly remember
- our conversations the day after the loss of the space shuttle
- Challenger. We wondered if the whole crew, especially
- those not piloting understood and had calculated the risks.
- Gary talked about his first flight in bad weather in
- instrument conditions with his children asleep in the plane.
- He was aware of his responsibilty and carefully calculated
- the risk.
-
- During Gary's last years he devoted a great deal of time to
- a manuscript he has written titled "Computer Connections:
- People, Places, and Events in the Evolution of the
- Personal Computer Industry". Learning and education
- were one of his books theme's, beginning with his
- academic days at the University of Washington where he
- earned his bachelor's, master's and Ph.D. degrees in Computer
- Science. He began his professional career as a professor
- here at the Naval Postgraduate School. Even after leaving
- this school to build a software business he still held on to a
- passion for teaching. This is very clear in his manuscript
- where he wrote,
-
- "I took the battle against the BASIC language.
- I did this because I felt that the kids using
- BASIC on the Apple II and IBM's new PC
- were being taught archaic mind tools to solve
- problems. A new alternative had appeared on
- the scene, a computer language called Logo.
- I wrote Digital Research Logo, or Dr. Logo, as
- it came to be called. Logo taught kids how to
- think about solving complex problems.
-
- Logo became popular among a largish cult
- group of teachers that were computer literate,
- and I believe their students gained significant
- mind tools. But, in reality, most teachers found
- themselves racing to catch up with their
- brightest students and found solace in using
- BASIC.
-
- This is not a comment about inadequacies in
- our educational system. It is a comment about
- the times. I expected too much of educators.
- I expected them to understand, in a sense, the
- sugar-coated concepts of LISP used in AI that
- were embodied in the Logo language.
-
- It was then that I learned that computers were
- built to make money, not minds."
-
-
-
- In closing I would like to pay my tribute to Gary as a
- pioneer. I could not resist pulling out the Webster's
- Dictionary to look up the word pioneer. I was all too
- pleased with the definition: "A pioneer is one who
- originates anything or prepares the way for others."
-
-
- Gary was truly a pioneer among pioneers.
-
-