Masters Thesis on Ruby

Dear Ruby community,

Last week, I submitted by Masters Thesis[1] on -- to summarize greatly
-- using Ruby to bring agile software development practices like TDD and
BDD to the cold, dark realm of *hardware* development.

I am very thankful to Matz and the community for the Ruby language,
which -- to say the very least -- saved me from the year-long drudgery
of researching and producing the trillionth (read: boring) thesis on
microprocessor caches. :slight_smile:

May there be more research and papers on/with Ruby in academia! Fiat
Lux!

[1] http://ruby-vpi.rubyforge.org/papers/

路路路

--
Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.

Hi Suraj,

Last week, I submitted by Masters Thesis[1] on -- to summarize greatly
-- using Ruby to bring agile software development practices like TDD and
BDD to the cold, dark realm of *hardware* development.

Solid work! You probably just have created a useful tool!

kaspar

Kaspar Schiess wrote:

Hi Suraj,

Last week, I submitted by Masters Thesis[1] on -- to summarize greatly
-- using Ruby to bring agile software development practices like TDD and
BDD to the cold, dark realm of *hardware* development.
    
Solid work! You probably just have created a useful tool!

kaspar
  

Cold, dark hardware? I know they're trying to reduce power consumption of servers, but cold? :slight_smile:

路路路

--
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky, FBG, AB, PTA, PGS, MS, MNLP, NST, ACMC(P)
http://borasky-research.blogspot.com/

If God had meant for carrots to be eaten cooked, He would have given rabbits fire.

M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:

Cold, dark hardware? I know they're trying to reduce power consumption
of servers, but cold? :slight_smile:

Ah, their goals reflect their world, it seems. It is a place so cold and
dark that you shiver with fear and cringe with disgust upon its sight;
for the development techniques it employs are those left behind by the
software world of 10 years ago.

According to one of my advisors, it was not until a few years ago that
the hardware industry finally accepted SCM (version control) systems.
Before that, they refused to hear of such nonsense because file backups
worked just fine!

Shocking. O_O

P.S. This is, of course, a brash generalization! Do correct me.

路路路

--
Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/\.

Superconductors ya us!

martin

路路路

On 2/8/07, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky <znmeb@cesmail.net> wrote:

>
Cold, dark hardware? I know they're trying to reduce power consumption
of servers, but cold? :slight_smile:

Suraj Kurapati wrote:

M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
  

Cold, dark hardware? I know they're trying to reduce power consumption
of servers, but cold? :slight_smile:
    
Ah, their goals reflect their world, it seems. It is a place so cold and dark that you shiver with fear and cringe with disgust upon its sight; for the development techniques it employs are those left behind by the software world of 10 years ago.

According to one of my advisors, it was not until a few years ago that the hardware industry finally accepted SCM (version control) systems. Before that, they refused to hear of such nonsense because file backups worked just fine!

Shocking. O_O

P.S. This is, of course, a brash generalization! Do correct me.
  

I remember in the days before flash memory firmware, and before even UV-erasable firmware, when firmware was in good old ROM. Man, it took days to get anything changed. And every time I complained, I was told, "Be patient! After all, ROM wasn't built in a day!"

<ducking>

路路路

--
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky, FBG, AB, PTA, PGS, MS, MNLP, NST, ACMC(P)
http://borasky-research.blogspot.com/

If God had meant for carrots to be eaten cooked, He would have given rabbits fire.