https://improbable.com/2018/10/26/a-look-back-at-george-gobles-prize-winning-barbecue-quick-ignition-triumph/

-----Original Message-----
From: Christian Liendo via cctalk [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, April 03, 2026 8:40 AM
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts <[email protected]>
Cc: Christian Liendo <[email protected]>
Subject: [cctalk] George Goble passed away

George Goble  passed away
https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/wlfi/name/george-goble-obituary?id=61144779

>From Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_H._Goble

George Harry Goble (December 11, 1952 – March 18, 2026) was an American 
scientist and academic, who was a staff member at the Purdue University 
Engineering Computer Network and a 1996 Ig Nobel Prize winner.

Goble was commonly known as ghg, since he used that as a login id and signature 
in digital communications from the 1970s. He received his BS in Electrical 
Engineering at Purdue University.

In 1981, he wired together the backplanes of two DEC VAX-11/780 systems and 
made the first multi-CPU Unix computer, preceding DEC's dual processor 
VAX-11/782.[1] The operating system was based on the
4.1 BSD kernel,[1]: 293  and the modifications thus eventually made it into the 
4.3 BSD Unix release.[citation needed] At the beginning of the 4.3 BSD user 
manuals, Bill Joy wrote a special note of thanks to GHG for being courageous 
enough to put the multi-CPU kernel into a production environment before anyone 
else did.[2] (However, the frequent crashes for a while inspired the writing of 
many humorous text files by the Purdue University Electrical Engineering 
student body, such as "The VAX had a Blowout", to be sung to the tune of 
"London Bridge is Falling Down".) The development of the Dual-CPU Unix system 
was the subject of Goble's Master's thesis.

Around this time, Goble, along with Bill Croft, also developed a networking 
protocol for Unix, referred to as pnet, which was used at Purdue at the time 
before being displaced by TCP/IP. Pnet allowed remote logins, and remote 
execution of commands, among other capabilities.[3]

In the late 1980s, Goble started experimenting with refrigerants, due to 
increased danger and lower thermodynamic efficiency of the recently introduced 
R-134a compared to the older R-12 which was being phased out due to concerns 
about damage to the ozone layer, and the incompatibility of R-134a with the 
lubricating oil and other materials used in systems built for R-12. In 1987, he 
converted the beverage refrigerators in the Eta Kappa Nu lounge in the basement 
of the Purdue Electrical Engineering building to using a refrigerant of his own 
devising. This refrigerant is now recognized as R-406A by ASHRAE and is 
available commercially under the trade name AutoFrost. He later developed 
another refrigerant which is compatible with R134A lubricants, but which is 
superior in thermodynamic efficiency and lower system internal pressures called 
GHG-X8.

In 1996, Goble was awarded the Ig Nobel Prize in Chemistry, for preparing a 
barbecue for cooking in less than 5 seconds by the use of a smoldering 
cigarette, charcoal and LOX (liquid oxygen).[4] This act attracted the 
attention of the West Lafayette, Indiana fire department, which warned him to 
never let them catch him in the possession of LOX near a barbecue fire ever 
again.

Goble was also noted for driving a vehicle with the Indiana license plate UNIX, 
and also GHG-1

https://engineering.purdue.edu/ECE/Alums/OECE/2022/George-Goble


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