Dear team,

I was very sad when I heard this news.  Bill was a fun and friendly presence, 
and patiently mentored me in my early days.  I’ll never forget when he scrawled 
“I love bots” on one of my NANOG badges.  I still have it.  :)  I had the 
fortune to be on a couple of panels with him, and I learned from his answers 
and the way he presented them.  I admire that he cared, and he gave of himself 
without hesitation.  I will miss him and his contributions.

Zichrono livracha, Bill’s memory is definitely for blessing.

Be well,
Rabbi Rob.


> On Jan 27, 2020, at 3:34 PM, Brett Watson <br...@the-watsons.org> wrote:
> 
> I was saddened to see this yesterday, that Bill Manning had passed. I was 
> surprised this morning that it hadn’t hit NANOG yet but thought I’d post 
> something because I have a ton of respect for Bill as I’m sure many here do.
> 
> I met Bill as a very young, thought-I-knew-everything network engineer around 
> ’92 when I was starting my internet life at a small ISP in Houston. Bill was 
> visiting Stan Barber @ Sesquinet, which was my upstream provider at the time 
> via T1, if I remember it all correctly.
> 
> I was young, fresh out of college with a CS degree, and learning this 
> “internet thing.” I met with Bill on campus at Rice University to discuss 
> networking/routing, and Bill taught me CIDR, which I had no f-ing idea at 
> that time what it was. Bill was always gracious and willing to share/teach. 
> We always chatted and stayed in touch at NANOG and IETF conferences and 
> through his relationship with Los Nettos over the years. Most notable, to me, 
> was 2007 when my youngest daughter was diagnosed with cancer, and I believe 
> Bill’s wife had (or previously battled) cancer as well. I hadn’t seen Bill 
> for a few years, but he immediately reached out, shared his positive 
> thoughts/prayers, and kept in touch during the battle we went through. Bill 
> cared about people, and as noted below, he was smart as hell, and always had 
> a crazy idea for how to solve a problem. Also as noted in Rod’s note below, 
> Bill had a wealth of music knowledge and could always recommend something new 
> and interesting to listen to.
> 
> I’ll definitely miss Bill, and his passing makes me feel the years, and the 
> mileage, but in a good way.
> 
> -b
> 
>>> This morning I talked to Julie Manning, Bill's wife. Bill died early
>>> Saturday morning, at home in Oregon.  Most of you know Bill was
>>> waiting for a new heart. He would perhaps have gotten one next
>>> month. I guess the old one just wouldn't hold out long enough.
>>> 
>>> I first met Bill in about 1995, when I returned to ISI after my first
>>> stint in Japan.  He had taken a position in the Los Nettos project at
>>> ISI, a regional network project in the days when Internet service and
>>> operations work was still heavily shared between business and
>>> academia.  Bill brought an operator's eye to the project, often seeing
>>> things differently from the researchers in the group.
>>> 
>>> Bill kept the most erratic hours of any non-student I've ever met.  He
>>> might be in the office at 2am or at 2pm, either was equally likely.
>>> I'd ask, "Bill, what time did you come in?" He'd reply, "10am."  "I
>>> was here before that, and you were already here, it must have been
>>> earlier."  "Greenwich Mean Time."
>>> 
>>> And in one phase of life, "Bill, where do you live?" "Seat 4A."  He
>>> would speculate about his average altitude and speed over the previous
>>> month.
>>> 
>>> And, like any good geek, Bill had a spectacular collection of tie-dye
>>> t-shirts.  He came by the look honestly: growing up in the Bay Area,
>>> he had actually snuck into Grateful Dead rehearsals held in a barn,
>>> and had traveled as a deadhead for a while.
>>> 
>>> At ISI, we called Bill "the bad idea fairy".  He always brought a
>>> slightly-off-kilter view of technical problems, which triggered
>>> endless discussions of fascinating, if usually implausible,
>>> alternatives.
>>> 
>>> He had the most broad-ranging musical tastes of anyone I knew, and
>>> would eat almost anything (though, like me, he didn't drink alcohol).
>>> I was often envious of his eating and musical experiences.  He
>>> certainly lived life to its fullest.
>>> 
>>> On one occasion, I recall, we were eating lunch in a Thai restaurant
>>> for the first time.  Bill called for the food "the way you'd make it
>>> in Thailand".  The waiter went back into the kitchen and came out with
>>> a few raw Thai chiles.  Bill ate one whole, without even breaking a
>>> sweat.  The owner of the restaurant immediately came out to see who
>>> was eating them.  Pam became a friend to our group.
>>> 
>>> On other occasions, when the waiter asked for his order, Bill would
>>> point to another person at the table, and say, "I'll have what she's
>>> having."  "Well, what is she having?" "I don't know, I haven't heard
>>> her say."  Once in a while, he would point to someone else in the
>>> restaurant and say, "I'll have what they are having."  It was funny
>>> and sometimes disconcerting, which was very Bill, and it was also his
>>> way of making sure he himself was eating (and thinking and doing) as
>>> broadly as possible, without getting stale.
>>> 
>>> Bill worked in a bakery before joining Texas Instruments and
>>> accidentally falling into computer networking.  (When we first met, he
>>> was commuting between Houston and L.A.; Julie and the kids were still
>>> in Houston.)  I believe he attended a series of colleges but never
>>> finished his bachelor's degree.  Just a few years ago, however, Jun
>>> Murai convinced him to get a Ph.D.; this took clearing administrative
>>> hoops to demonstrate that Bill's life experience matched that of a
>>> bachelor's degree, which it certainly did.  I was honored to be on his
>>> Ph.D. committee.  I literally created a "trouble ticket" accounting
>>> scheme to track change requests for his thesis.
>>> 
>>> Bill was a valued member of the WIDE Project here in Japan.  He worked
>>> with the DNS root operations group here, and participated in as many
>>> WIDE meetings as he could.  He also came to Keio University's Shonan
>>> Fujisawa Campus when he was in Japan, and one of the best things about
>>> Bill was how seriously he took the students and their work, treating
>>> them like adult colleagues.
>>> 
>>> Bill had friends on all seven continents, and for all I know on the
>>> International Space Station, as well. He was loved by us all.
>>> 
>>> Julie does not plan to have a funeral immediately, so there is no need
>>> for flowers or the like. The family may do a memorial service in Utah
>>> in the spring.
>>> 
>>> He was a unique and wonderful human being. And a good friend.
>>> Rest in peace, Bill.
>>> 
>>> —Rod
> 
>> 

--
Rabbi Rob Thomas                                           Team Cymru
   "It is easy to believe in freedom of speech for those with whom we
    agree." - Leo McKern



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