Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-06 Thread Otis Gospodnetić
Hi Erick,

Thank you for this email.  Wow, 40 years!  I was always intrigued by your
programming longevity!  Thank you for all your contributions.  Any sailing
still going on?  Enjoy part 2 :)

Otis
--
Monitoring - Log Management - Alerting - Anomaly Detection
Solr & Elasticsearch Consulting Support Training - https://sematext.com/



On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 9:09 AM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>
>


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-05 Thread Erik Hatcher
Erick -

All that puzzle solving (and sailing) has kept you young at heart, even if you 
are an Old Timer.  Your straightforward, no-nonsense, easy going ways in the 
community and in the field onsite with extremely challenging customer 
situations has inspired me and many others.  All of our customers you've worked 
with have enjoyed your attitude, efforts, and devotion and everyone wishes for 
you or your clone to be around.  Your non-stop, relentless efforts to compost 
the BadApples has made quality and reliability a template for the rest of us.  
Much respect for your countless e-mails (ok, we can count them, but the number 
is pretty big!) educating the users with patience and thorough responses.  You 
don't know it unless you can teach it, and you exemplify that - thanks for all 
the lessons, Senior Erickson.

Best of luck with the squirrels.  Mother nature did invent a way to keep them 
in check, though I wouldn't recommend obtaining cats just for that purpose 
(cats need litter boxes, or your precious yard and garden).  One gardening 
lesson I learned from an old farmer: grow three times as much as you need - one 
third for the deer, one third for the rabbits/squirrels/etc, and if you're 
lucky a third for you, though I don't think it works that way after seeing just 
a few green hornworms demolish a large patch of peppers a few years back.

Best as always.

Love,
Erik

> On Dec 30, 2020, at 9:09 AM, Erick Erickson  wrote:
> 
> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it really 
> been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every 
> day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time. Let me 
> tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that required 
> that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function calls by 
> knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! 
> Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a 
> co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the program would 
> shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The "good old 
> days"...weren't...
> 
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional 
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered, though, 
> that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that 
> after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the 
> realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being 
> aware of the changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't 
> something I can do casually.
> 
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that than 
> programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm 
> building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an electric 
> fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun emplacement will 
> take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a permit from the 
> township for that though. Do you think the police would notice? Perhaps I 
> should add that the local police station is two blocks away and in the line 
> of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them wouldn't be 
> as obvious would it?
> 
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh 
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels 
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the 
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" 
> (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
> 
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to build 
> for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats need 
> crew...you get the idea.
> 
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and 
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and 
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people 
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had 
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
> 
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need 
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next 
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me know 
> and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do each 
> week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting effort 
> are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to casually.
> 
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: 
> "erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses 
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came 
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this 

Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-05 Thread Simon Willnauer
Eric, thanks so much for your open and true words! You will always be
part of this community if you subscribed to the lists or not. (you
can't escape :D) Thanks for your contributions, this is a team effort
and you are a part of it.

enjoy the welding!!

simon

On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 3:09 PM Erick Erickson  wrote:
>
> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it really 
> been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every 
> day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time. Let me 
> tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that required 
> that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function calls by 
> knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! 
> Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a 
> co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the program would 
> shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The "good old 
> days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional 
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered, though, 
> that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that 
> after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the 
> realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being 
> aware of the changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't 
> something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that than 
> programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm 
> building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an electric 
> fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun emplacement will 
> take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a permit from the 
> township for that though. Do you think the police would notice? Perhaps I 
> should add that the local police station is two blocks away and in the line 
> of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them wouldn't be 
> as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh 
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels 
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the 
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" 
> (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to build 
> for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats need 
> crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and 
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and 
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people 
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had 
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need 
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next 
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me know 
> and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do each 
> week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting effort 
> are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: 
> "erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses 
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came 
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail 
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org



Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-04 Thread Susheel Kumar
Hi Erick, You have been really helpful to everyone of us and we are gonna
to miss you a lot. But best of luck and enjoy your time !!!

On Mon, Jan 4, 2021 at 1:22 PM Jason Gerlowski 
wrote:

> Hey Erick,
>
> I'm sorry for our users and for the project overall to hear you'll be
> "hanging up the spurs", but excited that you've found new, fun things
> to expand into in your retirement!  I hope they're awesome!
>
> Best of luck man, it's been great working with you!
>
> Best,
>
> Jason
>
> On Mon, Jan 4, 2021 at 1:05 PM Uwe Schindler  wrote:
> >
> > Hi Erick,
> >
> > too bad that you want to leave us. I really hope to see you in person
> after
> > COVID19 allows us to meet at conferences again. It was always nice
> > discussions with you on the mailing list, although I am not subscribed to
> > solr-user@lao, so the whole work you were doing is not so obvious to me.
> >
> > About the squirrels: As an European, I have no idea why those grey
> American
> > squirrels are so aggressive and eat all your tomatoes!
> > https://www.dropbox.com/s/g8w441njq8xvaxd/20210104_185757.jpg?dl=0
> (sitting
> > in my garden)
> >
> > Here in Bremen, I have no problem at all with tomatoes and squirrels. The
> > European red squirrels only collect and eat nuts (or to be more correct:
> > they collect nuts and then forget about them, making hazelnut trees grow
> > everywhere in my garden, if you do not destroy them).
> > https://www.dropbox.com/s/e9twup0850vxpdz/20210104_185720.jpg?dl=0
> > (leftovers of the nuts...)
> >
> > My tomato plants all survived and I was able to harvest this year.
> >
> > Uwe
> >
> > -
> > Uwe Schindler
> > Achterdiek 19, D-28357 Bremen
> > https://www.thetaphi.de
> > eMail: u...@thetaphi.de
> >
> > > -Original Message-
> > > From: Erick Erickson 
> > > Sent: Wednesday, December 30, 2020 3:09 PM
> > > To: dev@lucene.apache.org
> > > Subject: Old programmers do fade away
> > >
> > > 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> > really been
> > > that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every
> day.
> > The
> > > art and science of programming has changed over that time. Let me tell
> you
> > > about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that required
> that
> > you
> > > to look on the stack for variables and trace function calls by knowing
> how
> > to
> > > follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! Not to
> > mention
> > > that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a co-worker who
> > could
> > > predict the number of bytes by which the program would shrink based on
> > > extracting common code to functions. The "good old days"...weren't...
> > >
> > > I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing
> occasional
> > work
> > > on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though,
> > that
> > > I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that
> > after this
> > > much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the
> > realization
> > > that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being aware
> of
> > the
> > > changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't something I
> can
> > do
> > > casually.
> > >
> > > I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> > than
> > > programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm
> > > building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric
> > fence
> > > along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun emplacement will
> > take
> > > more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a permit from the
> > > township for that though. Do you think the police would notice?
> Perhaps I
> > > should add that the local police station is two blocks away and in the
> > line of
> > > fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them
> wouldn't be
> > as
> > > obvious would it?
> > >
> > > Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> > > tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The
> > squirrels ATE
> > > EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And
> > > the melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means
> > war"
> > > (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
> > >
> > > Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> > build
> > > for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need
> > > crew...you get the idea.
> > >
> > > It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best
> and
> > > brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> > > guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing
> > people
> > > are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've
> had
> > > questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
> > >
> > > I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, 

Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-04 Thread Jason Gerlowski
Hey Erick,

I'm sorry for our users and for the project overall to hear you'll be
"hanging up the spurs", but excited that you've found new, fun things
to expand into in your retirement!  I hope they're awesome!

Best of luck man, it's been great working with you!

Best,

Jason

On Mon, Jan 4, 2021 at 1:05 PM Uwe Schindler  wrote:
>
> Hi Erick,
>
> too bad that you want to leave us. I really hope to see you in person after
> COVID19 allows us to meet at conferences again. It was always nice
> discussions with you on the mailing list, although I am not subscribed to
> solr-user@lao, so the whole work you were doing is not so obvious to me.
>
> About the squirrels: As an European, I have no idea why those grey American
> squirrels are so aggressive and eat all your tomatoes!
> https://www.dropbox.com/s/g8w441njq8xvaxd/20210104_185757.jpg?dl=0 (sitting
> in my garden)
>
> Here in Bremen, I have no problem at all with tomatoes and squirrels. The
> European red squirrels only collect and eat nuts (or to be more correct:
> they collect nuts and then forget about them, making hazelnut trees grow
> everywhere in my garden, if you do not destroy them).
> https://www.dropbox.com/s/e9twup0850vxpdz/20210104_185720.jpg?dl=0
> (leftovers of the nuts...)
>
> My tomato plants all survived and I was able to harvest this year.
>
> Uwe
>
> -
> Uwe Schindler
> Achterdiek 19, D-28357 Bremen
> https://www.thetaphi.de
> eMail: u...@thetaphi.de
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Erick Erickson 
> > Sent: Wednesday, December 30, 2020 3:09 PM
> > To: dev@lucene.apache.org
> > Subject: Old programmers do fade away
> >
> > 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been
> > that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every day.
> The
> > art and science of programming has changed over that time. Let me tell you
> > about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that required that
> you
> > to look on the stack for variables and trace function calls by knowing how
> to
> > follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! Not to
> mention
> > that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a co-worker who
> could
> > predict the number of bytes by which the program would shrink based on
> > extracting common code to functions. The "good old days"...weren't...
> >
> > I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work
> > on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered, though,
> that
> > I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that
> after this
> > much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the
> realization
> > that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being aware of
> the
> > changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't something I can
> do
> > casually.
> >
> > I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than
> > programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm
> > building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an electric
> fence
> > along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun emplacement will
> take
> > more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a permit from the
> > township for that though. Do you think the police would notice? Perhaps I
> > should add that the local police station is two blocks away and in the
> line of
> > fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them wouldn't be
> as
> > obvious would it?
> >
> > Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> > tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The
> squirrels ATE
> > EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And
> > the melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means
> war"
> > (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
> >
> > Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build
> > for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats need
> > crew...you get the idea.
> >
> > It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> > brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> > guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing
> people
> > are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> > questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
> >
> > I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> > something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If
> > anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me know and I
> can
> > put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do each week. I
> won't
> > disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting effort are nicely
> self-
> > contained for instance and something I can to casually.
> >
> > My e-mail 

RE: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-04 Thread Uwe Schindler
Hi Erick,

too bad that you want to leave us. I really hope to see you in person after
COVID19 allows us to meet at conferences again. It was always nice
discussions with you on the mailing list, although I am not subscribed to
solr-user@lao, so the whole work you were doing is not so obvious to me.

About the squirrels: As an European, I have no idea why those grey American
squirrels are so aggressive and eat all your tomatoes!
https://www.dropbox.com/s/g8w441njq8xvaxd/20210104_185757.jpg?dl=0 (sitting
in my garden)

Here in Bremen, I have no problem at all with tomatoes and squirrels. The
European red squirrels only collect and eat nuts (or to be more correct:
they collect nuts and then forget about them, making hazelnut trees grow
everywhere in my garden, if you do not destroy them).
https://www.dropbox.com/s/e9twup0850vxpdz/20210104_185720.jpg?dl=0
(leftovers of the nuts...)

My tomato plants all survived and I was able to harvest this year.

Uwe

-
Uwe Schindler
Achterdiek 19, D-28357 Bremen
https://www.thetaphi.de
eMail: u...@thetaphi.de

> -Original Message-
> From: Erick Erickson 
> Sent: Wednesday, December 30, 2020 3:09 PM
> To: dev@lucene.apache.org
> Subject: Old programmers do fade away
> 
> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
really been
> that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every day.
The
> art and science of programming has changed over that time. Let me tell you
> about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that required that
you
> to look on the stack for variables and trace function calls by knowing how
to
> follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! Not to
mention
> that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a co-worker who
could
> predict the number of bytes by which the program would shrink based on
> extracting common code to functions. The "good old days"...weren't...
> 
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
work
> on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered, though,
that
> I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that
after this
> much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the
realization
> that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being aware of
the
> changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't something I can
do
> casually.
> 
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
than
> programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm
> building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an electric
fence
> along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun emplacement will
take
> more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a permit from the
> township for that though. Do you think the police would notice? Perhaps I
> should add that the local police station is two blocks away and in the
line of
> fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them wouldn't be
as
> obvious would it?
> 
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The
squirrels ATE
> EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And
> the melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means
war"
> (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
> 
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
build
> for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats need
> crew...you get the idea.
> 
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing
people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
> 
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
while. If
> anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me know and I
can
> put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do each week. I
won't
> disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting effort are nicely
self-
> contained for instance and something I can to casually.
> 
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is:
> "erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker
came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
service
> you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
> 
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, 

Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-04 Thread Michael McCandless
Wow, I am also sorry to hear this news Erick.  You have been such a massive
force in our community: your prolific personalized responses to
struggling users, your deep diving on truly tricky issues, your focus on
testing and founding the Bad Apple report, your incredible patience and
always gentle tone, the numerous issues you moved forward, even that
exciting time that the delightful auto-complete feature in gmail bit you
very publicly :)

I would prefer you slowly faded away as well :)  Cherry pick the few
interesting user emails or issues that catch your fancy.  A hobby can and
should be just that, and welding sounds like a great idea.  This is an
incredible feature of open-source: you can contribute even in small ways
without being fully up-to-date on everything, and that all still helps
nudge things forwards.

Big +1 for the video Mike S shared, and really most of Mark Rober's videos
are amazing.  E.g. his version 3 anti-package-thieves design is awesome:
https://youtu.be/h4T_LlK1VE4

As Simon would say: Ein weinendes und ein lachendes Auge (translation:
"with a smile in one eye and a tear in the other").

Happy welding, good luck with the squirrels!!  They are devilishly smart
and persistent creatures.

Mike McCandless

http://blog.mikemccandless.com


On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 9:09 AM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> 

Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-04 Thread Shalin Shekhar Mangar
Hi Erick,

It's been a pleasure and an honor! I know nothing about squirrels or
tomatoes (except that the latter are tasty) but I do know about
hobbies so I wish you all the best with them!

If you indeed want to be a welder, I am sure that you'll become a good
one and probably end up teaching a few folks about it as well :-)

Keep us folks in mind and drop us an update from time-to-time. I
suggest twitter - it's not new but you might want to sign up for it ;)

Take care and have fun!

Cheers,
Shalin

On 1/3/21, Günter Hipler  wrote:
> Hi Erick
>
> thanks for your work you have done for the library world.
> You were one of the people who made it possible to show libraries the
> way to use search engines for their "discovery services".
>
> Günter
>
> On 30.12.20 15:09, Erick Erickson wrote:
>> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
>> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve
>> puzzles every day. The art and science of programming has changed over
>> that time. Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack
>> emulator that required that you to look on the stack for variables and
>> trace function calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the
>> tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all
>> you had to work with. I had a co-worker who could predict the number of
>> bytes by which the program would shrink based on extracting common code to
>> functions. The "good old days"...weren't...
>>
>> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
>> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
>> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
>> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
>> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
>> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
>> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>>
>> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
>> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
>> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
>> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
>> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get
>> a permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
>> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
>> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
>> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>>
>> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
>> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The
>> squirrels ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST
>> YEAR! And the melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize
>> this means war" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>>
>> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
>> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
>> need crew...you get the idea.
>>
>> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
>> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
>> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing
>> people are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when
>> I've had questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>>
>> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
>> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
>> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
>> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
>> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
>> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
>> casually.
>>
>> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is:
>> "erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
>> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker
>> came over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new
>> mail service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is
>> enough.
>>
>> Best to all,
>> Erick
>> -
>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
>> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>>
>
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>
>


-- 
Regards,
Shalin Shekhar Mangar.

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: 

Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-03 Thread Günter Hipler

Hi Erick

thanks for your work you have done for the library world.
You were one of the people who made it possible to show libraries the 
way to use search engines for their "discovery services".


Günter

On 30.12.20 15:09, Erick Erickson wrote:

40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it really been that 
long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every day. The art and science 
of programming has changed over that time. Let me tell you about the joys of debugging 
with a Z80 stack emulator that required that you to look on the stack for variables and 
trace function calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack 
of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a 
co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the program would shrink based 
on extracting common code to functions. The "good old days"...weren't...

I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional work 
on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered, though, that 
I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that after 
this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the 
realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being 
aware of the changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't 
something I can do casually.

I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that than programming. 
Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm building with it. If my 
initial plan doesn't work, next up is an electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted 
automatic machine gun emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able 
to get a permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would notice? 
Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks away and in the line of 
fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as 
obvious would it?

Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh tomatoes rather 
than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES 
WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of 
course you realize this means war" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...

Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to build 
for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats need 
crew...you get the idea.

It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and 
brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and 
guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people are 
to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had questions. 
I owe a lot of people beers ;)

I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need 
something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next while. 
If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me know and I 
can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do each week. I 
won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting effort are nicely 
self-contained for instance and something I can to casually.

My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "erick.erick...@gmail.com". 
There's a correlation between gmail addresses that are just a name with no numbers and a person's 
age... A co-worker came over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new 
mail service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
  
Best to all,

Erick
-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org



-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org



Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-03 Thread Yonik Seeley
Thank you for everything you've done for Lucene/Solr over the years Erick!

I sympathize with your squirrel situation... I tried to grow tomatoes the
first year when we moved into our house in NJ.
We had a small wire fence around the patch, but it was clearly insufficient
against the deer and squirrels around here.
I eventually switched to just growing stuff on my deck (for the deer), and
switched to hot peppers, which the squirrels
pretty much leave alone :-)

Hope to (eventually) see more of everyone in person!
Happy new year, and good luck staying retired Erick!

-Yonik

p.s. I first learned to program on a Z80 as well:
http://www.trs-80.org/model-1/


On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 9:09 AM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>
>


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-02 Thread Ishan Chattopadhyaya
Thank you Erick for your guidance, mentorship and your contributions. I
hope to meet you over Activate, if you're planning to come over (whenever
it is organized again). I shall miss you very much. Have a great time, and
I hope you secure the tomatoes and come back to Solr soon. :-)

On Sat, Jan 2, 2021 at 8:21 AM Tomoko Uchida 
wrote:

> Hi Erick.
>
> 40 years is indeed amazing - I'm not sure I can keep up with the
> fast-paced industry for that long ;)
> Meanwhile, life is also long today, hope to see you again someday. Thank
> you for all your contributions. I'll miss you as others will do so. Wish
> you all the best.
>
> Tomoko
>
>
> 2021年1月2日(土) 9:11 Anshum Gupta :
>
>> Hey Erick!
>>
>> I'm really happy to hear that you have found something that interests you
>> even more than programming and open source. It's been great pleasure
>> working with you all this while.
>>
>> Thank you for all your contributions and good luck with the welding
>> machine. I'm looking forward to seeing what you build and hope to see you
>> when things are safe and we are in the same city :)
>>
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 6:09 AM Erick Erickson 
>> wrote:
>>
>>> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
>>> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
>>> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
>>> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
>>> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
>>> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
>>> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
>>> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
>>> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
>>> "good old days"...weren't...
>>>
>>> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing
>>> occasional work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've
>>> discovered, though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the
>>> code. I guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One
>>> major factor is the realization that there's so much going on with
>>> Lucene/Solr that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to
>>> really understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>>>
>>> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
>>> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
>>> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
>>> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
>>> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
>>> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
>>> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
>>> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
>>> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>>>
>>> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
>>> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
>>> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
>>> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>>>
>>> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
>>> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
>>> need crew...you get the idea.
>>>
>>> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best
>>> and brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
>>> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
>>> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
>>> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>>>
>>> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you
>>> need something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the
>>> next while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let
>>> me know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to
>>> do each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
>>> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
>>> casually.
>>>
>>> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
>>> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail
>>> addresses that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A
>>> co-worker came over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's
>>> this new mail service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40
>>> years is enough.
>>>
>>> Best to all,
>>> Erick
>>> -
>>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: 

Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-01 Thread Tomoko Uchida
Hi Erick.

40 years is indeed amazing - I'm not sure I can keep up with the fast-paced
industry for that long ;)
Meanwhile, life is also long today, hope to see you again someday. Thank
you for all your contributions. I'll miss you as others will do so. Wish
you all the best.

Tomoko


2021年1月2日(土) 9:11 Anshum Gupta :

> Hey Erick!
>
> I'm really happy to hear that you have found something that interests you
> even more than programming and open source. It's been great pleasure
> working with you all this while.
>
> Thank you for all your contributions and good luck with the welding
> machine. I'm looking forward to seeing what you build and hope to see you
> when things are safe and we are in the same city :)
>
>
>
> On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 6:09 AM Erick Erickson 
> wrote:
>
>> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
>> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
>> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
>> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
>> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
>> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
>> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
>> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
>> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
>> "good old days"...weren't...
>>
>> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
>> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
>> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
>> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
>> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
>> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
>> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>>
>> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
>> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
>> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
>> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
>> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
>> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
>> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
>> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
>> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>>
>> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
>> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
>> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
>> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>>
>> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
>> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
>> need crew...you get the idea.
>>
>> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best
>> and brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
>> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
>> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
>> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>>
>> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
>> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
>> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
>> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
>> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
>> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
>> casually.
>>
>> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
>> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
>> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
>> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
>> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>>
>> Best to all,
>> Erick
>> -
>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
>> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>>
>>
>
> --
> Anshum Gupta
>


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-01 Thread Anshum Gupta
Hey Erick!

I'm really happy to hear that you have found something that interests you
even more than programming and open source. It's been great pleasure
working with you all this while.

Thank you for all your contributions and good luck with the welding
machine. I'm looking forward to seeing what you build and hope to see you
when things are safe and we are in the same city :)



On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 6:09 AM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>
>

-- 
Anshum Gupta


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2021-01-01 Thread David Smiley
I'm *really* sad to see you stepping away.  You're a legend in
our community, especially with your tireless help to our users.  And you're
truly a pleasure to work with and to simply know.

40 years is enough indeed... but... I'll make a last ditch selfish request
to help me come to grips with you leaving:  consider "fading away"
(gradually) instead of more suddenly.  I sympathize with the difficulty in
keeping up with development but you needn't try to -- just restrict your
attention to a limited area of the code or topically.  This suggestion is
directed at not just you but really at anyone who wants to contribute.
This is a huge project that is probably overwhelming to newcomers.  I use a
keyword based email filter technique for this.  Maybe you might consider
helping with the Solr TLP migration?  That's more social and less code
hacking.  I hope this paragraph comes off respectfully -- it's ultimately
your choice to enjoy your time as you wish.

Thanks for sharing your thoughts on retirement and further interests. It is
thought provoking to consider what to do at retirement age.  So many
possibilities.

Oh and finally, thanks for this email to announce your intentions.  It's
rather rare to get this; others fade away without an announcement and so
there is no public reflection on the departure of the individual.  I could
list some but I don't want to distract from your message.

Ryan: that squirrel water shooter video at PyCon was fantastic; thanks for
sharing!

~ David Smiley
Apache Lucene/Solr Search Developer
http://www.linkedin.com/in/davidwsmiley


On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 9:09 AM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a 

Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-31 Thread Ryan Ernst
Good luck on getting rid of those squirrels, Erick. Maybe this will give
you inspiration for other ways to get rid of them. It was one of the
coolest talks I can remember attending.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPgqfnKG_T4

On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 6:09 AM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>
>


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-31 Thread Gus Heck
Good luck and enjoy the welder. I did some welding many years ago, and it's
quite a cool thing to turn two bits of metal into a single piece. Hopefully
you've not had to learn about the UV emissions given off by the arc by
getting a good solid sunburn the way I did :).

The community will certainly miss your input. I've found reading your
responses to folks and your blog posts quite helpful.

As for squirrels, they are living proof that time on task matters... they
have 24/7 to consider how to get to that feeder/garden/whatever, and the
ultimate motivation. Most humans put a few hours a week into keeping them
out, hence the frequency with which they win.

Best of luck and enjoy!

-Gus

On Thu, Dec 31, 2020 at 9:04 AM Vincenzo D'Amore  wrote:

> Hi Erick, I want just to say thank you for your help.
> You have been one of the most present and reliable voices to listen in
> the Community.
> Thanks again for all your help and support, I wish you all the best.
>
> On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 3:09 PM Erick Erickson 
> wrote:
>
>> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
>> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
>> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
>> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
>> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
>> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
>> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
>> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
>> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
>> "good old days"...weren't...
>>
>> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
>> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
>> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
>> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
>> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
>> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
>> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>>
>> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
>> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
>> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
>> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
>> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
>> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
>> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
>> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
>> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>>
>> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
>> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
>> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
>> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>>
>> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
>> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
>> need crew...you get the idea.
>>
>> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best
>> and brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
>> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
>> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
>> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>>
>> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
>> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
>> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
>> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
>> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
>> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
>> casually.
>>
>> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
>> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
>> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
>> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
>> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>>
>> Best to all,
>> Erick
>> -
>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
>> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>>
>>
>
> --
> Vincenzo D'Amore
>
>

-- 
http://www.needhamsoftware.com (work)
http://www.the111shift.com 

Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-31 Thread Vincenzo D'Amore
Hi Erick, I want just to say thank you for your help.
You have been one of the most present and reliable voices to listen in
the Community.
Thanks again for all your help and support, I wish you all the best.

On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 3:09 PM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>
>

-- 
Vincenzo D'Amore


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-31 Thread Adrien Grand
Finding something that interests you even more is a great reason to move
forward, I wish you a lot of fun with the welder and hope the squirrels
will leave your tomatoes alone. Thank you for all your contributions and
your great community spirit.

On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 3:09 PM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>
>

-- 
Adrien


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-31 Thread Dawid Weiss
Hi Erick!

I think open source should be a hobby. Then it's fun. And hobbies
change, as do people. 40 years is a lot of fun doing programming! But
then... you know, the welding machine sounds sooo exciting! :)

I'm really sad to see you switch interests, especially that I've
enjoyed working with you so much (can't believe you leave me with that
large tidy patch for a welder... :). But hey, it's not the end of the
world -- hope to see you sometime down the road!

Dawid

On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 3:09 PM Erick Erickson  wrote:
>
> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it really 
> been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every 
> day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time. Let me 
> tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that required 
> that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function calls by 
> knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! 
> Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a 
> co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the program would 
> shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The "good old 
> days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional 
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered, though, 
> that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that 
> after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the 
> realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being 
> aware of the changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't 
> something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that than 
> programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm 
> building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an electric 
> fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun emplacement will 
> take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a permit from the 
> township for that though. Do you think the police would notice? Perhaps I 
> should add that the local police station is two blocks away and in the line 
> of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them wouldn't be 
> as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh 
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels 
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the 
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" 
> (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to build 
> for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats need 
> crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and 
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and 
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people 
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had 
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need 
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next 
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me know 
> and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do each 
> week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting effort 
> are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: 
> "erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses 
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came 
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail 
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>

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Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-30 Thread Alexandre Rafalovitch
Erick,

I kept hoping to meet again at a future conference and have an
extended version of the talk we had the first time we met. It was very
valuable but I felt I only got a glimpse of what was possible.
Perhaps, one day, I can travel near your actual "nest" and buy you a
beer or two and listen to the true war stories at the search coalface.

Until then, I wish you luck with the furry rats. We have some in our
backyard, but since we haven't - yet - started growing things, I view
them with amusement rather than anger. But, next summer, I will
probably follow your steps too. I wonder if Tesla coils are more DIY
then the laser-guided heat rays. Though heat rays on lower settings
could be quite nice in Montreal winter, I am sure.

Regards,
   Alex.
P.s. Good old days! When one had to tell the disassembler that the
next instruction was "probably" a start of the string as one tried to
hack Xonix and Arkanoid levels!
P.p.s. If you need any listening material while you garden, I suspect
you will enjoy the hardware/software discussions podcast: "On the
metal" https://oxide.computer/podcast/

On Wed, 30 Dec 2020 at 09:09, Erick Erickson  wrote:
>
> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it really 
> been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every 
> day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time. Let me 
> tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that required 
> that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function calls by 
> knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! 
> Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a 
> co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the program would 
> shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The "good old 
> days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional 
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered, though, 
> that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that 
> after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the 
> realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being 
> aware of the changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't 
> something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that than 
> programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm 
> building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an electric 
> fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun emplacement will 
> take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a permit from the 
> township for that though. Do you think the police would notice? Perhaps I 
> should add that the local police station is two blocks away and in the line 
> of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them wouldn't be 
> as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh 
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels 
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the 
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" 
> (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to build 
> for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats need 
> crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and 
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and 
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people 
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had 
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need 
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next 
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me know 
> and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do each 
> week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting effort 
> are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: 
> "erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses 
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came 
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail 
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-30 Thread Christian Moen
Take care, Erick.  Thanks for all your contributions. Lots of people will
miss you.  I wish you all the best.

On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 3:09 PM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>
>


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-30 Thread Michael Sokolov
Woah! That plan sounds like fun! I might have to join you, but not yet
:) On the topic of squirrels, you must have seen this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFZFjoX2cGg, but I share it again
because it always deserves a second watch. Also, my own personal
attempt at squirrel-proofing didn't go so well:
https://photos.app.goo.gl/i2Dken7DS89s1eBw8

and of course thank you for all the contributions, dedication, and
great community spirit - we'll miss you, Erick!

-Mike

On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 9:09 AM Erick Erickson  wrote:
>
> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it really 
> been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every 
> day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time. Let me 
> tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that required 
> that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function calls by 
> knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! 
> Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a 
> co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the program would 
> shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The "good old 
> days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional 
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered, though, 
> that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that 
> after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the 
> realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being 
> aware of the changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't 
> something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that than 
> programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm 
> building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an electric 
> fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun emplacement will 
> take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a permit from the 
> township for that though. Do you think the police would notice? Perhaps I 
> should add that the local police station is two blocks away and in the line 
> of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them wouldn't be 
> as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh 
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels 
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the 
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" 
> (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to build 
> for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats need 
> crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and 
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and 
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people 
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had 
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need 
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next 
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me know 
> and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do each 
> week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting effort 
> are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: 
> "erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses 
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came 
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail 
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>

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RE: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-30 Thread ufuk yılmaz
I can only wish to be as productive as you 35 years from now, you have been an 
inspiration to me even though I only know you through your answers to hard 
questions here and presentations on youtube 

Hope you will enjoy your free time even more from now, and find a way to 
protect those tomatoes from pesky thiefs.

Regards

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

From: Erick Erickson
Sent: 30 December 2020 17:09
To: dev@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Old programmers do fade away

40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it really 
been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles every day. 
The art and science of programming has changed over that time. Let me tell you 
about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that required that you to 
look on the stack for variables and trace function calls by knowing how to 
follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack of) speed! Not to mention 
that 64K of memory was all you had to work with. I had a co-worker who could 
predict the number of bytes by which the program would shrink based on 
extracting common code to functions. The "good old days"...weren't...

I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional work 
on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered, though, that 
I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I guess that after 
this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major factor is the 
realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr that simply being 
aware of the changes, much less trying to really understand them, isn't 
something I can do casually.

I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that than 
programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure I'm 
building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an electric fence 
along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun emplacement will take 
more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a permit from the township 
for that though. Do you think the police would notice? Perhaps I should add 
that the local police station is two blocks away and in the line of fire. But 
an infrared laser powerful enough to "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious 
would it?

Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh 
tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels ATE 
EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the melons. 
In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" 
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...

Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to build 
for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats need 
crew...you get the idea.

It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and 
brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and 
guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people are 
to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had questions. 
I owe a lot of people beers ;)

I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need 
something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next while. 
If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me know and I 
can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do each week. I 
won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting effort are nicely 
self-contained for instance and something I can to casually.

My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: 
"erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses that 
are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came over to 
my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail service you 
might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
 
Best to all,
Erick
-
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Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-30 Thread Bram Van Dam
Your presence on the user mailing list will be sorely missed. You've
been an invaluable source of good advice for years. I owe you at least
$bignum beers.

Best of luck with the squirrel problem (they are rather tasty) and any
other fun projects!

Take care, and thank you,

 - Bram

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Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-30 Thread Atri Sharma
It has been a privilege to watch you work your magic and reference the
great work that you have done in this project. Thank you for setting the
bar for us.

I am happy to support the BadApples report if you would like

On Wed, 30 Dec 2020, 19:46 Erick Erickson,  wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>
>


Re: Old programmers do fade away

2020-12-30 Thread Ilan Ginzburg
Hey Eric,

Sad and happy to read your message. You've been a clear voice in the Lucene
Solr community and I was always AMAZED how willing you are to help and
explain, over and over again when needed.
That's the sad part.

The happy part is that those squirrels do need to learn and the electric
fence at the top does sound reasonable. Hope tomatoes don't care too much
about lack of freedom.

Really appreciated interacting with you in my short time here. Have fun!

Ilan

On Wed, Dec 30, 2020 at 3:09 PM Erick Erickson 
wrote:

> 40 years is enough. OK, it's only been 39 1/2 years. Dear Lord, has it
> really been that long? Programming's been fun, I've gotten to solve puzzles
> every day. The art and science of programming has changed over that time.
> Let me tell you about the joys of debugging with a Z80 stack emulator that
> required that you to look on the stack for variables and trace function
> calls by knowing how to follow frame pointers. Oh the tedium! Oh the (lack
> of) speed! Not to mention that 64K of memory was all you had to work with.
> I had a co-worker who could predict the number of bytes by which the
> program would shrink based on extracting common code to functions. The
> "good old days"...weren't...
>
> I'd been thinking that I'd treat Lucene/Solr as a hobby, doing occasional
> work on it when I was bored over long winter nights. I've discovered,
> though, that I've been increasingly reluctant to crack open the code. I
> guess that after this much time, I'm ready to hang up my spurs. One major
> factor is the realization that there's so much going on with Lucene/Solr
> that simply being aware of the changes, much less trying to really
> understand them, isn't something I can do casually.
>
> I bought a welder and find myself more interested in playing with that
> than programming. Wait until you see the squirrel-proof garden enclosure
> I'm building with it. If my initial plan doesn't work, next up is an
> electric fence along the top. The laser-sighted automatic machine gun
> emplacement will take more planning...Ahhh, probably won't be able to get a
> permit from the township for that though. Do you think the police would
> notice? Perhaps I should add that the local police station is two blocks
> away and in the line of fire. But an infrared laser powerful enough to
> "pre-cook" them wouldn't be as obvious would it?
>
> Why am I so fixated on squirrels? One of the joys of gardening is fresh
> tomatoes rather than those red things they sell in the store. The squirrels
> ATE EVERY ONE OF MY TOMATOES WHILE THEY WERE STILL GREEN LAST YEAR! And the
> melons. In the words of B. Bunny: "Of course you realize this means war" (
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XNr-BQgpd0)...
>
> Then there's working in the garden and landscaping, the desk I want to
> build for my wife, travel as soon as I can, maybe seeing if some sailboats
> need crew...you get the idea.
>
> It's been a privilege to work with this group, you're some of the best and
> brightest. Many thanks to all who've generously given me their time and
> guidance. It's been a constant source of amazement to me how willing people
> are to take time out of their own life and work to help me when I've had
> questions. I owe a lot of people beers ;)
>
> I'll be stopping my list subscriptions, Slack channels (dm me if you need
> something), un-assigning any JIRAs and that kind of thing over the next
> while. If anyone's interested in taking over the BadApple report, let me
> know and I can put the code up somewhere. It takes about 10 minutes to do
> each week. I won't disappear entirely, things like the code-reformatting
> effort are nicely self-contained for instance and something I can to
> casually.
>
> My e-mail address if you need to get in touch with me is: "
> erick.erick...@gmail.com". There's a correlation between gmail addresses
> that are just a name with no numbers and a person's age... A co-worker came
> over to my desk in pre-historical times and said "there's this new mail
> service you might want to sign up for"... Like I said, 40 years is enough.
>
> Best to all,
> Erick
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>