- Rich Rosen
Rich Rosen (born
May 13 ,1956 ) is asoftware developer and an author on the subject ofweb development , who gained notoriety as an early high-volume contributor toUsenet newsgroups .Early Life and Education
Rosen grew up in
Forest Hills, Queens ,New York . He attendedCornell University and later Queens College, where he received a bachelor's degree incomputer science . He later received his master's degree in the same subject fromStevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken,New Jersey while working atBell Labs and later atBellcore .1980s - Bell Labs and Usenet
While at Bell Labs and Bellcore (now known as
Telcordia Technologies ) during the 1980s, Rosen was a lead engineer on the team that beta-testedIBM 's then brand-newDB2 relational database management system , which would become one of the first commercially available relational database systems on the market. He also developed one of the earliest onlinebulletin board systems used to keep telephone operating companies informed aboutBell System software standards.He also acquired a reputation there as a high-volume poster to
Usenet newsgroups . The volume of Usenet postings he produced led to rumors that many people were actually using his account, or that he was an AI program produced by Bell Labs to increase the amount of Usenet traffic and thus augmentAT&T 's long distance telephone revenues.Reference to [http://groups-beta.google.com/group/fido.gr.greekchat/msg/536e7ae07b7808ef quoted article] about Rich Rosen by Tom Richardson] Weekly statistics collected during his heyday often showed that he, by himself, was responsible for [http://groups-beta.google.com/group/mod.newslists/msg/fab74ef36eb3e17c more than 2%] of the entire volume of Usenet postings. The phrase "We are all Rich Rosen" was coined during this period and persisted as a Usenetcatchphrase for a number of years.Rosen posted in a number of newsgroups on a variety of topics, most particularly music and religion. Among his contributions:
* " [http://www.neurozen.com/waarr/RulesOfNetnewsDebating.html Rich Rosen's Rules of Netnews Debating] ", a satirical post intended not so much as a set of guidelines to follow when posting, but rather as a statement (likeGodwin's Law ) about the irrational and often obnoxious behavior often observed in Usenet discussions (which Rosen himself admittedly engaged in).
* The Book ofUbizmo and the religion ofUbizmatism , a parody of the extremes associated with mainstream organized religions.
* The story ofToejam Jawallaby , a fictitious musician who was the winner of several bogus "greatestguitarist of all time" polls, whose exploits were later expanded upon in thenewsgroup rec.music.jazz .
* Several musical compositions that appeared on the first Usenet compilation tape, "a little net.music" (1985 ), including " [http://www.neurozen.com/music/richmusic/A%20Fair%20Exchange.mp3 A Fair Exchange] " and " [http://www.neurozen.com/music/richmusic/Vegetableland.mp3 Vegetableland] " (which was ostensibly performed by the aforementionedToejam Jawallaby ).
* Several Usenet April Fool's jokes, including the (now doubly ironic) "Microsoft Windows for the Macintosh" and the "Olfactory Transfer Protocol" (WebOdor).He was known for participating in (some would say "inciting") numerous
flame war s with other Usenet contributors, including the notoriousBrahms Gang , a pair of equally loquaciousmathematics graduate students from Berkeley who posted from a server namedbrahms.berkeley.edu
. His verbal battles with the Brahms Gang in particular were sometimes referred to as "The War of the Rosens". He was also known for his variety of frequently-changing .signature files, including:* Anything's possible, but only a few things actually happen. [Misquoted in
Bill Jefferys ' book "Discovering Astronomy" as "Many" things are possible, but only a few things actually happen."]
* Life is complex. It has real and imaginary parts. [Often attributed to others including Gregory Benford but originating with Rosen on Usenet in [http://groups.google.com/group/net.religion/msg/0c254bd2c8897175?dmode=source 1985] ]
* Look for significance where there's none intended, and you'll surely find it.
* Now I've lost my train of thought, I'll have to catch the bus of thought.
* echo "This is not a pipe." | cat - >/dev/tty [Apun onMagritte 's famous painting as applied to pipes in theUnix shell .]Usenet Citations and Acknowledgements
The volume and content of Rosen's postings evoked strong reactions in both advocates and detractors. People either praised him for his postings or denounced him as a threat to the future of Usenet.
* His voluminous output and frequently abrasive postings led many to seek his removal from the net. He was never actually banned, censored or otherwise prevented from posting, but his
e-mail address was used on theman page for thenetnews "expire" command as an example of how this command could be used to [http://www.neurozen.com/waarr/expire.8.html delete all postings from a particular user] . The use of his address in this manner was [http://groups-beta.google.com/group/news.admin/browse_frm/thread/32d2abafab12bcfe/3c3040755456cd57 viewed by some] as an endorsement ofcensorship and it was eventually removed.* His notoriety also led
Howard Rheingold to use his name in " [http://www.cs.indiana.edu/docproject/bdgtti/bdgtti_18.html A Slice of Life in My Virtual Community] " (an article propagated through its inclusion in the "Big Dummy's Guide to the Internet") as an example of how people usekill file s:
*:... putting the name of a person or topic header in a ``kill file" (aka ``bozo filter") means you will never see future contributions from that person or about that topic. You can simply choose to not see any postings from Rich Rosen, or that feature the word ``abortion" in the title.
* A column by "Mr. Protocol" (Michael O'Brien) in "Sun Expert" magazine (now called "Server/Workstation Expert") used the word "Rosenesque" to describe a person who produces a substantial volume ofe-mail messages large enough to overwhelm a local network.
* The Net.LegendsFAQ says:
*: How can a Net.Legends list omit Rich Rosen? I think he still holds the record for amount of spontaneous, germane text in a single newsgroup (net.philosophy ).
* In contrast, one system administrator wrote an article entitled [http://groups-beta.google.com/group/net.news.group/msg/90cf873232bb3fbb?hl=en "Proposed deletion of Rich Rosen"] :
*: "If net.bizarre and net.flame were threats to the network's continued existence, then Rich Rosen is doubly so. ... Rich Rosen's volume is enormous. His postings comprise two percent of the network's volume. ... Expressed as a raw number of bytes per week, the number is horrendous. It is impossible for one man to produce this much cogent thought in a week. Speaking only for myself (perhaps a poor comparison) I don't think I could even type that fast. ... Due to his high volume and near-total lack of redeeming value, I propose that Rich Rosen be removed from USENET. In order to preserve the usual facade of democracy, I'm doing this as a poll. ..."
* On the other hand, an article by Thomas Richardson from 1995 said:
*: "Rosen was particularly noteworthy, because he posted pages[and] pages of coherent material in just about every group I read. ... This was back when you could read the entire Usenet feed in a single afternoon. That doesn't explain how Rosen managed to post on every subject, though. I think he must have been a speed typist or he must have had some kind of augmented metabolism or something. ... He also managed to stay coherent and to largely avoid repeating himself. Maybe there really was no Rich Rosen. MaybeDennis Ritchie was just playing a weird joke on everybody."Post-Bellcore (1990s)
Rosen left
Bellcore in 1989, but continued to post occasionally to Usenet from various outside accounts. He was one of the early members of the Panix user community in New York through the mid-1990s. He hosted his own popular "Monty Python home page" that was cited by both Lycos and the Global Network Navigator.During the latter part of the 1990s, Rosen worked at Pencom Web Works with
Leon Shklar , with whom he would later collaborate on " [http://www.webappbuilders.com/ Web Application Architecture: Principles, Protocols, and Practices] ", a widely-used textbook for senior and graduate level college courses inWeb application development .Present Day
Today, Rosen lives once again in
New Jersey with his wife, Celia. He is "retired" from posting to Usenet, but now has his own [http://rlr.blogsome.com blog] to post to. He still writes on the subject of web application development, including articles for various online and print journals, while also working with Leon Shklar on a second edition of their Web Application Architecture book. In addition, he recently contributed material to the fourth edition of "Mac OS X for Unix Geeks" which will be published in the fall of 2008. He continues to record his own music, some of which is accessible on his web site.Publications
* "Web Application Architecture: Principles, Protocols and Practices",
Leon Shklar , Richard Rosen,2003 , Wiley, ISBN 0-471-48656-6 - classified as "General Web Site Development").
* "Mac OS X Leopard for Unix Geeks", Ernest E. Rothman, Brian Jepson, Rich Rosen,2008 , O'Reilly, ISBN 9780596520625.Notes
External links
* [http://www.neurozen.com/website/ Rich Rosen's web site]
* [http://rlr.blogsome.com/ Rich Rosen's blog]
* [http://www.neurozen.com/waarr/ Rich Rosen recalls his days on Usenet]
* [http://www.webappbuilders.com/ Web site for "Web Application Architecture: Principles, Protocols and Practices" book]
* [http://groups-beta.google.com/group/news.answers/msg/6ed2531f2bb6b706 Net.Legends.FAQ (Noticeable Phenomena Of UseNet) Part 4/4]
* [http://groups-beta.google.com/group/net.news.group/msg/dbb9c3445eea33ac Usenet accusation that Rosen's output was autogenerated] - archive from1985 .
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