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- Original_To: BITNET%"CSG-L@UIUCVMD.BITNET"
- Original_cc: TBOURBON
- Message-ID: <CSG-L%92122214133186@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.csg-l
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 14:10:00 CDT
- Sender: "Control Systems Group Network (CSGnet)" <CSG-L@UIUCVMD.BITNET>
- From: Tom Bourbon <TBOURBON@UTMBEACH.BITNET>
- Subject: RE: The cure for frustration?
- Lines: 28
-
- From Tom Bourbon (921222 13:58 CST) --
- Greg Williams (921222) gave his reasons for not performing experiments
- and modeling to test his ideas in PCT. I can hardly believe that he
- would consider the roof over his family's head (literally) more important
- than sitting down to a weekend ofprogramming in Pascal or C! Still,
- Bill's point is well taken: Far too few of us are engaged in the experimental
- science side of PCT. Bill listed three, and by my own admission I am the
- least accomplished programmer in the lot. If three more people begin working
- on experiments and modeling, I will immediately fall to sixth on the chart.
-
- But I remember the day when, without Bill saying a word to me, I realized
- I had spent a year or more asking him to do things for me -- tweek a program
- here, add a condition there, and so on. I took some of the source code he so
- generously gives away, printed it out, spread it across the floor of my
- lab and started to learn. Of course, I was doing it all backwards, but even
- that clumsy approach has let me do SOME of the things I want to do with PCT.
-
- As Greg says, most people are busy doing what sems most important to them.
- So am I. It is just that when I got off of my duff and started hacking
- away at my code, the things that seem most important to me began to change.
-
- Like it or not, unless more people become active in experimental work on
- PCT, all of the discussions and hand wringing in the world, over how to
- present PCT more effectively, will lead to nothing. That is not meant as
- a harangue -- just the facts.
-
- Until later,
- Tom Bourbon
-