81y.o. and still fully sane and capable of intellectual work. I wish everyone such good health, thanks for the interview.
@JJFX- Жыл бұрын
There's truly something to be said about keeping your mind sharp by continuing to work, either through hobbies or otherwise. Just need to keep the stress in check.
@RiversJ Жыл бұрын
Yea it ain't going to be pretty if you just slump on the couch and usually have sausage and beer for lunch you'll be dead or decrepit in a decade. Wouldn't advice working full time to your grave, there aren't many who regret spending fewer hours at the office but suddenly after five decades turn to couch potato is a death sentence.
@jovetj Жыл бұрын
Keep using your mind or you'll lose it!
@chriscross7671 Жыл бұрын
Genetics play a significant role in this context. His current intellectual abilities serve as a testament to the remarkable intelligence he possessed during his prime.
@rjpajaron Жыл бұрын
I saw a photo, he was working on early days of Azure.
@blackrifle67366 ай бұрын
*At a seminar decades ago, Mark Russinovich commented that Dave Cutler is last man in the world to have an entire OS (WinNT) in his head. After hearing this conversation I am inclined to believe it. Respect!*
@Nexlingz Жыл бұрын
Please have Dave Cutler back for another round or bring on more industry veterans to share parts of their life, this is some of the best content I've listened to!
@monad_tcp Жыл бұрын
Raymond Chen and Mark Russinovick
@baumstamp5989 Жыл бұрын
BRING BILL@@monad_tcp
@guyprovost Жыл бұрын
Yes same here.... And I would like to hear about Azure history, reddog from the guys that were there!
@BritchesBumble57 Жыл бұрын
I nominate the Father of the Zen and Apple A architecture Jim Keller
@jpierce2l33t Жыл бұрын
Soooo much this! These stories of how the foundations of modern computation were developed are incredibly interesting! It's also a real trip to look back and realize how far tech has come since then!
@David_Best Жыл бұрын
Dave Cutler is a remarkable individual. I feel privileged to be his friend, and worked with him during the heyday at DEC in the 1970’s. I was on the product management side of the RSX-11M and VMS, VAX-11/750 era, tried to recruit him to Intel (48:52) , and later offered him VC financing (58:34). Dave is the most productive and dedicated individual in the technology field I have ever encountered. His set of accomplishments tells that story, and IMO he deserves more recognition. I am so thankful this history is being recorded.
@xXBL4KAl3YSSXx5 ай бұрын
How many Daves are responsible for today’s technology 🧐
@---usr4 ай бұрын
Wow, thanks for such details 🙂
@apefu Жыл бұрын
What really shocks me to my core is not how much Dave Cutler has done and been a part of. No. What shocks me is that he was a boss that actually knew something. It must have been heavenly to have a boss like that.
@bhollingsworth Жыл бұрын
Back then I think that was much more common. You almost had to know what you were doing. It was emerging technology. He started off doing what he was eventually hiring people to do.
@mytech6779 Жыл бұрын
@@bhollingsworth Was more common in all industries, there was a better blend of those that worked there way up and had practical knowledge and those with an academy background with underlying theory.(also the academics had less off-topic fluff) Stuff was really sliding downhill aound the time when the "personnel" depts became HR depts, wich was also associated with increased bureaucracy and middle managment bloat as everyone tries to game the system.
@bhollingsworth Жыл бұрын
@@mytech6779 I agree.
@MikeHarris1984 Жыл бұрын
I don't know if it would have been that good. Because he can critique you more in depth and with him being obsessed with performance and optimization you would be having to put in 110% daily which would burn out. But trade off is a boss you can bounce ideas off of and really know. If my boss was Dave, I would love it. But bosses like that that also micro manage are hell. Dave appears he trusts his employees and if your good enough for him, he would let you do your work.
@bhollingsworth Жыл бұрын
@@MikeHarris1984 agreed. It sounds miserable. People have said Gates was terrible to work for also for the same reason.
@jasonevans498 Жыл бұрын
Dave Cutler’s recall of his past experiences, the amount of detail he goes into when telling his stories, is so impressive. He is one of my role models, and I am so grateful to Dave Plummer for making this interview happen.
@GregAkselson-kb9cw Жыл бұрын
😊😊😊😊😊
@GregAkselson-kb9cw Жыл бұрын
😊😊0000000000000⁰000000
@j777 Жыл бұрын
His memory is ridiculously good, this guy is sharp.
@KarlTheExpert Жыл бұрын
I'm half his age and feel like a dimwitted sausage after watching this, can barely recall what I did a month ago at work. 🤯
@guaposneeze Жыл бұрын
I wish I was that sharp when I was in my 20's.
@AaronMcHale Жыл бұрын
Dave C is proof that if you keep your brain active, even at over 80 years old you can still be just as capable as someone in their 20s, but with way more life experience!
@andresdigi25 Жыл бұрын
He is amazing!! 80 years and that eloquence is fantastic
@PrimordialOops10 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same, its so cool to watch. hahahaha
@jajajajajaja8678 ай бұрын
Really unbelievable how switched on he is. He sounds 40
@mattj65816 Жыл бұрын
Oh my, it's three hours long. Exactly what I'd hoped for...
@ro.7427 Жыл бұрын
Haha just noticed, yes indeed I am in it for the long haul 3 hour cut. So good
@euromicelli5970 Жыл бұрын
Me, for the past 3 days: “That’s a lot of excerpts, is he going to leave anything for the full video?” Me, right now looking at the full video length: “Oh…”
@laz7354 Жыл бұрын
Perfect length for a full interview!
@jceggbert5 Жыл бұрын
I was wondering what the draw to the fell interview would be after so many clips. Oh.
@mattj65816 Жыл бұрын
@@euromicelli5970 same here.
@kazi68 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in a Central-East European small country, and my career has been based mostly on Microsoft's products from the early days of MS-DOS 3.x, Windows 3.x, NT4, 2k, 2k3 etc to Azure nowadays. I read about Dave Cutler sometime in the 90s, and I knew, he is the genius behind the scenes, and he is one of the people affecting and driving my career the most. Watching his interview is a very special experience, for which I am very thankful. If it was 10-20 hours long, I would still watch it. :)
@podstawka65253 ай бұрын
Witaj! 😉
@JoeBurnett Жыл бұрын
This is such a historical interview and I hope it is saved and available for future generations to watch for decades to come! Thank you!
@magiwarwolf1 Жыл бұрын
Just because you said it, I'm ripping and achieving it myself.
@adokapo Жыл бұрын
I am making dvd with it😅
@ricsip Жыл бұрын
Word of advice: if you find any valuable video on youtube that is worth rewatching from time to time, archive it yourself. Just remember: in 2023 december, google starts the inactive account purge project. If you know any channel, whose owner deceased (for example during covid), and hasnt logged into its google account in the past 1 year or so, now these videos will be the first candidates of the deletion. Search after it yourself, if you dont believe what I said. Thousands or millions of old videos will be gone forever very soon. Im not exaggerating.
@Corrado498 ай бұрын
Agree.
@Shahriyarj11 ай бұрын
Oh my god, Dave Cutler was my hero back in the days, when I got my hads on leaked windows nt kernel code, reading his design docs and seeing his name on top of source files felt like finding treasures!
@llamatar Жыл бұрын
Timestamps of clips of this interview posted on Dave's Garage (some clips have stuff cut out and the order changed) 0:56 - 5:38 The time Microsoft sent coffins to competitors 5:38 - 14:23 I Could Have Been a COBOL Programmer! 26:15 - 31:01 Software with ZERO bugs 53:44 - 1:01:59 Microsoft's "Pathetic" Operating Systems - Steve Ballmer and Breakfast at Denny's 1:01:59 - 1:10:33 Linux-Xenix-Unix vs OS/2 and Windows 1:37:39 - 1:42:20 Windows Tukwila 3.99 and Windows Cairo 1:51:01 - 1:59:52 Windows Longhorn and the Worst Code I've Ever Seen 2:18:59 - 2:21:11 What Successful Programmers Do That Others Don't
@virtualpilgrim8645 Жыл бұрын
2:52:17 Dave C. eating something. 2:59:50 While talking about X Cloud, Dave C. bumps the microphone and expertly realigns it again.
@georgH8 ай бұрын
2:06:55 apparently what are your choices on updating games vms in xbox it's been censored
@macaw2000 Жыл бұрын
Dave P you are a tremendous interviewer. Lots of space for the person to answer and knowledgable about the subject. I do hope you continue this as a series.
@codingbloke Жыл бұрын
Agreed. It was refreshing to have the guest do nearly all the talking. So many other tubers do at least half if not more of the talking than the guest. Great questions, too.
@FriendlyNeighborhoodNitpicker Жыл бұрын
I was also going to leave this comment. I’m so sick of interviewers who can’t avoid filling the interview with the sound of their own voice. The way to do it is what Dave did here: frame the story and then get out of the way and let the guy your interviewing tell it his way, and don’t feel like every pause is an opportunity to remind your viewers why you’re important. A couple seconds of dead air is OK, if it leads to another great story from the person you went through all this trouble to get on your show. DP knows his audience, and I suspect knows this great interview style from having to live it on a pretty much daily basis with his autism. I don’t know if I’m on the spectrum, but I am introverted, so I know all about verbally lining up the shot, and then stepping back so the other guy can take it and play the rest of the game.
@haroldthegw Жыл бұрын
This channel is ending up as an important history museum in its own right for a particular era of computing, love it.
@ayush8 Жыл бұрын
He is still coding!? I thought he would have retired by now. Seriously, what a legend!
@lppedd Жыл бұрын
This kind of people never retire. Considering it's the work of a lifetime it makes sense, and also it's pretty good to stay healthy, keep the brain working.
@ayush8 Жыл бұрын
@@lppedd Actually it's usually the corporate who pushes people out as they age. But I can understand, a guy with these credentials, they wouldn't wanna lose an employee who is one of the few people who knows a lot about windows and its internals.
@deltadom33 Жыл бұрын
You never give up coding.
@tammymakesthings Жыл бұрын
I’m feeling my own age a bit today as I celebrate a milestone birthday, and hearing Dave Cutler say he’s still coding is so inspirational for me.
@kaustix852 Жыл бұрын
He cant. He knows to much lol.
@danjo1967 Жыл бұрын
his recollection is so good; he can remember details from so long ago easily... he's truly remarkable.
@turdwarbler Жыл бұрын
brilliant interview, I have watched the clips and now watching the whole thing. amazing. I have programmed PDP-8, PDP-11, VAX, CP/M, DOS, Xenix, OS/2, Windows, and Linux and although 15 years shy of Dave Cutlers age I am still programming. So all this history really resonates with me.
@TT92348 Жыл бұрын
It was posted 30 mins ago?
@drewk3402 Жыл бұрын
Fabulous and fascinating history! Thank you, Dave P for thinking of doing this and making it happen. You did a great job interviewing Dave C. Dave C’s departure from DEC, where I worked at the time, felt like an earthquake. He was, and is, one of the best.
@BitwiseMobile Жыл бұрын
It's awesome to hear an octogenarian is still coding! I'm in my 50s and I am refusing to leave the technical aspect. Most of my colleagues have gone on to pure management positions. I have chosen to stay in the technical realm and I'm still actively coding. I am a senior architect. I do have direct reports, but I'm still heavily entrenched in tech and I want to stay there. Programming is like solving puzzles, and they say the best way to keep your brain healthy - especially as you get older - is to solve puzzles. I owe everything I know to DOS Debug - so whomever wrote that you are a god :D. I taught myself assembler with DOS Debug when I was 13 and that paved the road for my life goals.
@tepidtuna7450 Жыл бұрын
Ditto.
@InconspicuousChap11 ай бұрын
Management sucks for an engineer. Spent 12 years doing it - mostly that was a massive waste of time. Never actually accepted the rules of management - guessing instead of understanding the problem, blaming others for problems instead of just finding the root and fixing them, pretending to be infallible, so not willing to risk whatsoever, and thus not being able to create anything worthy. That's screwed up so badly. There are a few percent of population who are inherently good managers, there rest shouldn't even try. On the other hand, while I was attending bullshit meetings and writing bullshit reports, something bad happened to the technical expertise in the programming world. It's really difficult to hire a senior developer these days. The education mostly became oriented to learning patterns instead of thinking (and those patterns mostly concert integrating someone else's code, not writing your own, for some unimportant applications). So few years ago I switched to writing code as well. So long management nightmare.
@belizarius_9979 ай бұрын
@@InconspicuousChap Thank you for this comment. You really hit the nail on the head. Management is a massive waste of time for engineers. Many companies/IT departments these days are run by people, who don’t understand technology and got zero interest/passion for it. Sadly, too many developers are tempted by money/illusionary sense of power and join them. My 8 year management journey left me burnt out, disillusioned and cynical. I went back to programming and it took me awhile to recover. I never looked back.
@dr.strangelove5622 Жыл бұрын
I don't care whether it is the year of Linux or not, or if Windows wins the 'OS battle' or if 'MacOS remains superior'. I just have so much respect for legends like Cutler, Tevanian, Torvalds, Thompson... those folks who built that Apollo Guidance Computer... (ah yes you too Dave! Coding in ASM during winters is fun), that being alive at a time when I can watch interviews of these legends is a pleasure, is inspiring and makes me grateful for the foundation that has been laid down by these giants. Thanks Dave for interviewing Cutler and uploading it here on KZbin. The fact that this is 3 hrs long shows how your passion won't be subject to viewership statistics (a few months back CHM interviewed Ken Thompson and it was about his chess machines... no doubt an interesting interview... But I wished that it was as extensive as the one they did for Donald Knuth which was in two parts and each part being 3+ hrs long). Once again, thanks Dave!
@scallen3841 Жыл бұрын
I also say thanks to the men at bell labs who invented unix , without said unix they wouldn't have been able to create Linux
@Corrado498 ай бұрын
This is the only 3hrs video I watched full on KZbin. It’s better than Netflix. I remember to run the payroll systems of a company I worked on, on a Windows NT. That thing was never turned off I believe 😅. The amount of details Dave remembers is crazy, I am 48 and I don’t remember the model of the servers or systems I ran 20 years back. Thanks for such great interview.
@jiminma50 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Dave for just sitting back and letting this guy talk. I could listen to his stories for hours! I was so happy you didn't rush him along. You did an awesome job with this interview. I want more stories from this guy!
@DavesGarage Жыл бұрын
Thanks! I'm a good listener, and he was interesting, so it was a good mix :-)
@amendegw Жыл бұрын
How cool! I hired on to DuPont as a Chemical Engineer in 1968 and programmed on two of the machines that Dave Cutler mentions... Univac 1108 (I think he went from Bunker Ramo to DEC without mentioning that the 1107/8 were Univac computers) and the PDP-10 at the Ex Station. I never met Dave (but wish I had) as my programming was exclusively batch.
@bradleyr445117 күн бұрын
Univac 1108?? isnt that the one that executes fortran instructions directly from machine code? that was one of the all time best computers ever made in human history, a friend of mine used to repair those when they were at their peak.
@amendegw17 күн бұрын
@@bradleyr4451 Oh man... this is taxing my memory. The only thing I remember about the 1108 Fortran compiler was that it had very good diagnostics. I recall compiling Fortran programs on the 1108, correcting any syntax errors and then recompiling on the local IBM 1130 computer (which had very cryptic diagnostics). Also, it had drum magnetic storage (Fastrand, as I recall).
@bradleyr445116 күн бұрын
@@amendegw thats so cool! Id hear about that amazing machine, top of the line, incredible. I heard one where they were running a batch program and it was instantly done, like 300 milliseconds or? and they said there must be a mistake it should take longer to run, do it again... and again.. and the station controller came out yelling I have other batches to run what are you doing? and they said its finishing when it starts and he said it runs Fortran natively! I heard that a few times and used to wonder. Yes drum magnetic storage they worked on those, heard how one was so big and heavy it would move and they had to bolt it down? Young ppl would be in near shock to see what memory was. I worked on the CDC storage module drives and Gould/Encore superminis and later disk certifiers, so much precision electronics and science went in to all of it; Id really like to hear anything about those big systems
@pjakobs Жыл бұрын
As someone, who spent most of his career on "the other side" of Microsoft (first Novell, then the Linux world) and who would never consider working for Microsoft for some of the tricks the company pulled on products like DR DOS (an ex colleague of mine was a witness in the trial resulting from that) - I must still say: Dave Cutler has always been a name we all said with a great level of respect. In general, it seems that the engineering side of Microsoft was much better than what the product marketing teams made of it. On Dave's remarks on PowerPC and IBM making sure they don't create internal competition to AIX: I was at IBM in the 2000s and worked on the introduction of Power Linux systems - and went through the same pains then. Great to see this discussion! Thank you both for sharing.
@landspide Жыл бұрын
He sounds like he was the antithesis of Allchin... but i'm just guessing.
@therealmccoy7221 Жыл бұрын
He has to diss PowerPC because he is a "Wintel" guy. With all due respect (which really is due for Cutler) saying an architecture is bad because IBM cannot produce a decent compiler is - well, what do you expect. Microsoft was always married to Intel with AMD allowed to play along. PowerPC was a neat RISC architecture beating Intel/AMD to 64 bit (which was much cleaner on PowerPC than the 64 bit hacks of AMD) and had a vector unit (Altivec/VMX) before Intel even thought about it (i did some Altivec stuff and would choose it over the horrible SSE any time). They could just have used GCC or the Freescale compiler (PowerPC was a collaboraton of IBM and Freescale and is used in embedded devices until today). It wasn't that IBM did not want to "cannibalize" anything, it was that any flavor of Windows shouid commercially run on Intel and Intel only. It's all politics with M$.
@pjakobs Жыл бұрын
@@therealmccoy7221 well, as indicated in my original comment, I was at the receiving end of IBM protecting their AIX revenue at almost all cost (knowing the margin on those systems, that clearly is a sensible short term measure). I cannot say what they did with PowerPC, but I can certainly see them run much the same course there.
@therealmccoy7221 Жыл бұрын
@@pjakobs well they ironically delivered the PowerPC CPU's (Xeon) for M$ Xbox 360 later on.
@pjakobs Жыл бұрын
@@therealmccoy7221 sure, and the market overlap for an xbox and a power AIX system is exactly 0% - which is not true for the overlap between AIX systems and Windows server (or in my case, Linux servers). What I described and what I believe is similar to what Dave C described, is the power the AIX team held over the power hardware. I made no statement about the quality of the architecture.
@edhalferty Жыл бұрын
I'm glad someone finally sat down with Dave Cutler and asked him in-depth operating system questions. It's really interesting to trace the origins of the thought process that went into WinNT's design.
@Jennifer-007 Жыл бұрын
OMG….. 3 hours this is awesome!!!!! Thank you both… I was in building 27 working on Win95, IE, Visual Studio and ran the internal IPTD web presence under BradSi (Silverberg). Best job of my life…. Was great hearing Jim’s name mentioned, I was the person who smart mouthed him back on email on our building 26/27 DL BEFORE checking who he reports too…. LOL… I had no idea Msft Security had flash bangs and OC spray, 😂 I also worked down the street in the DEC building for Compaq (I still drink coffee from my DEC Alpha coffee cup) so this entire video made me so homesick for two companies that USE to be the greatest places to work on the east side…. Miss that part of my life so much… well maybe not the OC. 😉
@zzco Жыл бұрын
I had a copy of Visual Studio 6 standard when I was a teen, lol. Also had VB4. :p Why was the C++ dialog editor so awful? Lol
@lashlarue59 Жыл бұрын
Its funny what Cutler said about Gates saying they need to be nice to competitors. When I worked at Microsoft around 1997 I attended a sales meeting in Montreal and Ballmer showed a video of 2 kids in a dark alley wearing Oracle t-shirts vandalizing with spray paint a poster of either Windows NT or SQL Server. Then a super hero type guy came out wearing a Microsoft costume caught them and sprayed them with machine gun fire. It was pretty shocking.
@talesmaschio Жыл бұрын
Oh man what a privilege to be able to listen to this legend telling his stories. When I started my electronic engineering graduation, MS-DOS was at version 3.3 and I’ve had never heard of Windows. Still today I eventually need to launch a DOS VM in VMware to solve specifics problems on very old machinery. A few months ago I still had a Fidia (Italy) milling machine running on Win NT 4.0. This interview brought me a lot of memories. Thank you very much Dave, both of you, for sharing this with us.
@lightman512 Жыл бұрын
I do love the touch of having the PiDP11 in the background running RSX11M and showing the idle light pattern animation
@DavesGarage Жыл бұрын
Thank you for noticing! I was wondering if anyone would be able to spot the idle pattern from RSX11m, and I think you're the first to do so, or at least say so :-)
@markmatlock8612 Жыл бұрын
@@DavesGarage Dave, I also noticed the PiDP-11 running RSX-11M+ in the background behind Dave. It is likely running the RSX disk image that I provided to Oscar for the PiDP-11. There is an improved RSX disk image available from Johnny Billquist who created the TCP/IP stack and utilities for M+ in the past few years. I was wondering if Dave Cutler was aware of the renewed interested in RSX11M+ that's happening because of the more than 4,500 PiDP-11/70's that have been sold?
@thejoneseys Жыл бұрын
Started my career with VAX/VMS in 1990 before moving into LAN networked PCs with NT 3.51 & 4.0. Probably the most enjoyable decade of my life!
@JonathanMcCormack Жыл бұрын
Did you use to use Pathworks like we did to get the PCs talking to the VMS machines?
@God.Almighty Жыл бұрын
@@JonathanMcCormack omg, had forgotten about pathworks, installed on clients from floppies. was a bit kludgy but did the job and it seemed magical.
@JClishe Жыл бұрын
@@JonathanMcCormackNot OP, but I did!
@thejoneseys Жыл бұрын
@@JonathanMcCormackyes we did use pathworks but with DOS and Windows 3.11. A mainframe arrived later on and SNA server on NT 4 replaced the VAX and pathworks setup
@lashlarue59 Жыл бұрын
From a technical standpoint my time with Digital, the VMS operating system and all the networking around that was the best time of my career. I just never learned so much so fast. When things expanded to Pathworks on the PC's, Alisa Systems on the Mac's (remember the Mac originally only had Appletalk), SNA connectivity with JNET on the VAX, Ultrix, DEC X.25 gateway to that thing called the Internet...it was just the best 10 years I ever spent.
@NPCNo-xm2li Жыл бұрын
Dave Cutler is the preson who can use "Don't cite the deep magic to me, I was there when it was written" to more scenarios than any mortal man.
@HelloKittyFanMan11 ай бұрын
* any _other..._ (Maybe.)
@dsuess Жыл бұрын
Nice, the full episode! Thank you Dave for interviewing Dave Cutler!! You guys are amazing
@wcarlin Жыл бұрын
Great interview. Please thank Mr. Cutler for being so generous with his time and sharing his memories.
@brandonupchurch7628 Жыл бұрын
It's interesting to see that his whole career started on essentially doing a job that he lacked the applicable formal education and experience to do, with the way it is now, he'd likely have never been given the opportunity to even start where he did at DuPont on the Scott Paper project, nowadays every HR department would look and go, "no relevant experience," "no relevant formal education," and promptly file your application into the rejected bin and wouldn't allow such a position change to occur.
@cwalker_8088 Жыл бұрын
Did you catch the part where they sent him off to IBM to learn GPSS III? There were no formal degrees in this stuff back then. I suspect he got sent because no one else wanted to go or be stuck with dealing with that end of the computing business. I assume that DaveC was noticed as a go-getter and was picked for that reason.
@cwalker_8088 Жыл бұрын
But your point that HR would filter him out has some merit. When I left MSFT, the bar was basicly a masters degree in CS which I think most of the people who worked on NT 3.1 wouldn't have met.
@iTriguy1 Жыл бұрын
This is typically the advantage when things are brand new and essentially no one knows anything about them. There were plenty of jobs when he started that rejected people with no relevant experience. One of the problems faced today is everyone is familiar with software and all software is just software. To many there is no different between an iOS app and developing a new LLM.
@FriendlyNeighborhoodNitpicker Жыл бұрын
While I agree with what you’re saying in regards to what would happen today, in fact back then he did have the requisite skill set. Math and physics were his minors or at least study subjects for him, I forget if he said he degreed in them or not. So he had what would have been the appropriate skill set back then. I doubt there were any computer science degrees being offered at the time.
@annaczgli2983 Жыл бұрын
Holy moly. Didn't expect a 3 hour interview! Ok, off to make popcorn.
@rebornsmith7542 Жыл бұрын
This is the most amazing IT podcast I've personally ever heard.
@karltraunmuller7048 Жыл бұрын
I read "Showstopper" many years ago, and I really enjoyed it. And here's the man himself. Thanks for a fascinating interview.
@gordonm2821 Жыл бұрын
That was a great book.
@RodneyPillay Жыл бұрын
Excellent Book. It's where I first read about Dave Cutler in the 2000s.
@StuartWoodwardJP10 ай бұрын
I got the impression that Dave Cutller was a kind of a scary character from that book but he seems so approachable and a fun guy in this interview.
@gordonm282110 ай бұрын
@@StuartWoodwardJP - I agree the book did certainly give the impression he was scary. I am sure he was when deadlines were looming!
@charlesabboud16134 ай бұрын
@@StuartWoodwardJPI’m pretty sure there was a scene in that book where he punched a wall at Microsoft and left a hole in it. He across as hardcore, but was 1000% committed to quality
@thogameskanaal Жыл бұрын
Dave Cutler looks so young for his age. Really glad to see he's doing well!
@MassimoGaetani Жыл бұрын
Listening to this interview was a blissful experience; having spend 5 years writing Assembler for PDP11 on RSX11S, having done some work on VMS and then substantial work in Windows NT and later versions this interview touched so many points and brought me back to many amazing memories. I am impressed about Mr Cutler and his amazing memory, recalling architectures, bit width and so on. Dave thank you for sharing this amazing content and, of course, for your whole channel
@henrybecker2842 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Dave and Dave. I'm just a few years younger than Dave C, and I spent the first seven years of my professional life at IBM in their OS and complier System Test / Quality Assurance teams. So much of what Dave C said about fixing your own bugs or letting the next team "down the hall" do it are so true. Your discussions brought back so many great memories.
@ChrisEbertGP Жыл бұрын
This interviewing was wonderful. Dave Cutler is such a legend.
@markzempel3 ай бұрын
it is so heart-warming watching how much YOU enjoy doing this interview. You are rocking the the subs and likes Dave. Thank you so much.
@hl2mukkel Жыл бұрын
Very precious, part II please! This is easily one of the most interesting and capable programmers on the planet, I wish I would see more content of him!
@TheAces1979 Жыл бұрын
I could have listened to 3 more hours of this! Fascinating! I agree with the other comments. Bring him back for another round!
@Steckschwein Жыл бұрын
I just finished reading "Showstopper!" recently, so this interview is totally on-time for me. I heard that Dave Cutler does not like giving interviews, so congrats for getting him to talk for 3 hours.
@gottfriedheumesser1994 Жыл бұрын
It is very nice to meet Dave here in this meeting as I was AFAIK the first and only user of RSX-11a in Europe. Was some 50 years ago when I used a PDP-11/10 for controlling a high-voltage switchyard with automated switching sequences. With several modifications, this program ran under RSX-11m/s until all 'experts' got afraid of the millennium bug and did not know how to deal with a PDP-11 assembler program. BTW: I also modified the RSX-11m terminal driver for the VT30 color monitor controller. So I was programming on a color terminal already in the late 1970s. We needed it for the display of the high-voltage switchyards and controlled them by joystick and keyboard via (very slow) data connections to remote PDP-11s.
@visjenl Жыл бұрын
Thank you Dave, this did not disappoint. Great insights and interview.
@DavesGarage Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@markg735 Жыл бұрын
@@DavesGarage This was simply phenomenal.
@danidotexe_ Жыл бұрын
two programming giants in a room talking shop has to be my favourite format for content. please keep this up dave!
@fzambetta75 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing interview, I was mesmerised for the full three hours! He is such a legend and I would love Part 2 focusing more on his work at XBox!
@joecincotta5805 Жыл бұрын
I was already in the doghouse today, so I spent half the day listening to this and fixing all the broken things around the house. Loved this interview. Dave C is an absolute legend.
@wysoft Жыл бұрын
This was a fantastic interview. Cutler is so frank, honest, and has many great stories to tell. Thanks to both the Daves for this one!
@DavesGarage Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@climjames9 ай бұрын
Thank You Dave. I have been playing around with computers since the early 80's but I never got as good as you are. Please have more of the people of years gone by, while they are still here to teach.
@scsirob Жыл бұрын
Thank you, both Daves for this fascinating review of compute history! Best spent 3 hours in a long time. In the early days I ran NT 3.1 Beta on a Dell server that was purchased to run Novell Netware 3.12 or so. The interview section on NT4.0 prompted me to build a new VM on my VMWare homelab, install NT 4.0 on it from the ISOs, apply SP6a, then VMWare Tools. All ran without a glitch. Network is up and running now, on less resources than my smartwatch. All this before the interview was over ;) Back in the days we ran out entire company on that. I agree with Dave C. that it's sad to see "Hello World" take up 1MB of code. Current software isn't coding, it's glueing libraries together. No wonder that bugs are harder and harder to track down.
@thelol1759 Жыл бұрын
I could listen to you guys talk forever, you have to have him back on again!
@codecaine Жыл бұрын
Love how these guys contributed so much to our society
@shallex5744 Жыл бұрын
like what
@NoblePineapples Жыл бұрын
@@shallex5744 Listen to the video
@michaelwills1926 Жыл бұрын
@@shallex5744operating systems, hardware, interfaces…what else you want?
@monad_tcp Жыл бұрын
@@shallex5744 the guys at Stanford basically built this modern era computing infrastructure but there's always a moron , I bet you're a zealot of sorts.. tsc, tsc, monolith operating systems... Tanenbaum was right
@erkinalp Жыл бұрын
Thank both Daves for the video.
@melkon2103 Жыл бұрын
Incredible inspiration. Thanks for the interview Dave. Would really like more of this stuff by people that defined our early computer lives.
@jaytitus9023 күн бұрын
It is a good thing that you got this interview. Such passion and history.
@iamthe0ne23 Жыл бұрын
Love this! Would be incredible for it to become a series; maybe Raymond Chen next? ❤
@meatgoat4084 Жыл бұрын
A software engineer's software engineer. His passion for the trade is reflected by his command of historical details. This interview will go down as a classic. Good job.
@mdnita Жыл бұрын
This is an incredible interview! At first I kept reading 3 mins instead of 3 hours 😲. Thank you for this absolute treat! 🙏 I joined Microsoft the day Windows XP launched in the Windows Division and Dave was one of the first titans I visited at his office in Building 26, 3rd floor. Thank you Dave for everything you've done for Microsoft!
@jeanphilippebagel6414 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Dave, for an AMAZING episode. Dave Cutler's passion and insatiable curiosity are so obvious. What a treat of an interview!
@dosomething3 Жыл бұрын
please have him back and talk more about windows internals. More about azure internals. More about the kernel. More about drivers.
@neorandy7 ай бұрын
Almost half way through. Great history. I started my technology dependence with the Tandy Model 1, Level 2 16k with tape drive. When I started working for a Radio Shack Computer Center, 3.1 and 3.11 were the Windows I became adept at for my customers. I was even selling SCSI hard drives when they were nearly unheard of in the consumer market. Now I’m so old I’ve moved to the dark side for the simplicity. But for more than 30 years, Windows, applications and users, put food on the table.
@istvan_m Жыл бұрын
This is incredible. It will take me a few sittings to get through the 3 hours but it will be completely worthwhile. Thank you!
@DavesGarage Жыл бұрын
Enjoy!
@goofballbiscuits3647 Жыл бұрын
One of the best tech interviews to ever happen on this platform. Incredible wealth of knowledge present in only these two humans.
@bradleypagliaro9133 Жыл бұрын
So much great and relevant history! That's what I love about this channel. Nothing compares to learning from the people who were actually there and built the new things at the time. Thank you!
@joelcorley3478 Жыл бұрын
More please. Dave's reminiscing brings back so many memories from my own work history. I remember working with a number of the things he talks about ... but I was very young man at the time and he got there well ahead of me. Plus he's obviously held up better with age - I seriously doubt I'll remember all those details when I get to 81. He obviously deserves all the success he's had.
@RARufus Жыл бұрын
Would love a second round with Dave Cutler talking about his Xbox work and some of the stories around it. Maybe that’s not possible due to it being more recent work though.
@user-qf6yt3id3w Жыл бұрын
Was he involved in XBox? The story I heard as that they 'took the Windows 2000 source code and hacked it' to make the original XBox OS. It sounds like the sort of thing Cutler would be very dismissive of.
@RARufus Жыл бұрын
Rumor has it that he was brought in, or maybe volunteered, to step into the Xbox project a while back to help save the Xbox One virtualization layer for Xbox and Xbox 360 backward compatibility. I’m not sure if he was heavily involved before that, but I believe he’s been working on Xbox stuff for a while now…but I could be totally off base.
@rgl168 Жыл бұрын
He talks a bit about Xbox at around 2:00:00 in the video. Didn't know that all games are an actual VMs complete with its own OS. Thinking of that, if that's the architecture, it wouldn't be hard to run Xbox games on PCs. 🤔
@SalivatingSteve Жыл бұрын
@@rgl168it’s not quite it’s own full OS for each game, but the game application itself runs in a sandboxed virtualized environment, so it can only write to its own dedicated save slots and it’s memory space is isolated from the OS. It’s based on Microsoft’s Hyper-V technology.
@garyjackman72666 ай бұрын
Love you Dave Cutler.. Gold in this.. It brings back many memories...
@DaimlerSleeveValve Жыл бұрын
Having worked for CSC, I can't imagine the days when they had people who could write compilers, and I went to a college where a lecturer had written a FORTRAN compiler for a 1961 computer, just to prove it could be done.
@DavesGarage Жыл бұрын
On punch cards likely too!
@DaimlerSleeveValve Жыл бұрын
Nope. 5-track paper tape. The machine was a Ferranti Sirius. Our college had 4 of them at one time, from a production run of 20. A store room also held a ZEBRA, with magnetic drum as main store.@@DavesGarage
@yiannos3009 Жыл бұрын
I've been waiting 20 years for this interview. Thank you @DavesGarage!
@paulkingeu Жыл бұрын
It was great to hear from Dave Cutler what really went on with the versions of windows from one to the next. Some of us in the industry were close with our guesses obviously but it is fantastic to hear the details from the expert himself. Thank you and I hope he comes back for another chat session. I hope the linux work he is doing also gets fed back into the GPL community.
@junktionfet Жыл бұрын
Amazing interview. It took me a few installments to watch the full thing, but it was worth every minute. The detail in which Dave C. recalls this stuff is extraordinary.
@tomhekker Жыл бұрын
Wow. I’m more of a UNIX guy but love this interview, great to just hear Dave Cutler talk!
@keithbowden42484 ай бұрын
Very enjoyable conversation with 2 old timers who've been there, done that from the beginning... Great Stuff!
@chucksmalfus9623 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic interview Dave, thank you. You mentioned toward the end a rotary phase changer your neighbor has. They are extremely simple, it’s a 3phase motor running on single phase with the extra leg from the motor generating the 3rd phase. In my younger years I built several of them for friends and relatives.
@DavesGarage Жыл бұрын
I was surprised it was so "easy", but it worked great!
@Delease11 ай бұрын
It's great to see these stories preserved for posterity. So many amazing insights into the history, business, and engineering of computing system.
@robsyoutube Жыл бұрын
Having a boss like Dave Cutler must have been great, I totally get why you worked at Microsoft. Imagine working for someone who understands the industry hes managing people in. You probably didn't have to spend half your day trying to explain what you did in a way that a manger wouldn't think was you being a wizard with a magic wand.
@DavesGarage Жыл бұрын
I was blessed in that I came in at a time and place where I was surrounded by people like him. The learning curve was steep!
@robsyoutube Жыл бұрын
@@DavesGarage I have dramatically changed my opinion of Microsoft and its management for the better from the two Daves.
@MultiPetercool Жыл бұрын
@@robsyoutube Cutler had a reputation for a nasty temper and punching holes in drywall at DECwest.
@goqsane Жыл бұрын
@@robsyoutube honestly don't judge a book by its cover.
@mennovanlavieren3885 Жыл бұрын
@@MultiPetercool As long as they value honesty, and can admit faults when presented with the evidence, those are the best people to work with. For the simple reason that you know there is nothing stuffed under the carpet. If you don't get away with it, others don't get away with it. It keeps politicians and lazy people away. It can be tough sometimes, but it's worth it. The same with Steve Jobs, he was not always right, but the people who complain about him were mostly wrong.
@nickadams23619 ай бұрын
This is the best video I’ve watched from this channel by far. This dude is a wizard
@JakePomperada Жыл бұрын
Thank you Dave for this video.
@checktheevidence3 ай бұрын
Definitely "gold" in this interview - thanks Daves! I learned Pascal, LISP and ProLOG on a VAX 11/780 in the mid 1980s and I also did some PDP-11 Assembler in my days at Lancaster University I knew that Windows NT was developed by the guy that did VMS - but it's so great to hear all the history here and get a small flavour of Cutler's brilliance!
@shdon Жыл бұрын
If age has taken a toll on Dave Cutler's mental faculties, it either doesn't show or he he's lost more than some people have at all. I'm 35 years younger than he is and probably not half as sharp.
@alkamino Жыл бұрын
I can't believe this is free! The amount of information given here is so amazing it would have been a shame it would have been forgotten. Thank you!!!
@jasonfifer Жыл бұрын
This was a great interview. I've read Showstopper about 5 times I think and am fascinated with what Dave C & team was about to accomplish. And am blown away that it's still the basis of Windows today. I would've been interested to hear what Dave C's thoughts are on AI and writing code. Thank you for doing this interview!
@razoraz Жыл бұрын
DaveC’s thoughts about AI and ML would make a fantastic follow up to this interview, if he’s been keeping up! (Not easy for anyone to do given the constant development in the space)
@watchrepairwithchris43465 ай бұрын
Met Dave Cutler once at DEC. I joined in 1966 as a hardware techi from the UK. PDP 7-8 8i,8s-9. Fixed them and ran courses for customers. Thank him for the interview and wish him well. Have you any interview which would give a similar overview of apple software development? Visited the Swiss Super computer center last week. Quite an eye opener. Thanks Chris
@jamesweatherley9215 Жыл бұрын
I watched the first teaser and put off watching the rest as I didn't want to find I'd watched half the episode before it was released. Well, that was a misplaced concern - over three hours of content! Time to sit down and enjoy. Thanks for organising this Dave, and thanks other Dave for taking part.
@DaimlerSleeveValve Жыл бұрын
"I like to tell stories" - and doesn't he tell interesting stories, and tell them well! A great listen for those of us with any history in IT. Current programmers ought to listen to this; they will gain great insights into WHY things are the way they are.
@MultiPetercool Жыл бұрын
A lot of DEC folks I knew said Windows NT or WNT was one letter better than VMS like IBM and HAL in 2001. DEC was pinning its success on the success of NT in the later days.
@Cristian-yj4gk11 ай бұрын
Thank you for doing this. Dave is truly a legend and I wouldn’t have known people like him existed without your channel.
@tibbydudeza Жыл бұрын
3 hours long - thank you !!!! Dave Cutler is on par with Linus Torvalds.
@TheBeardedLibertarian Жыл бұрын
OMG, going back to the beginnings. I loved this interview.
@TheBeardedLibertarian Жыл бұрын
My first encounter was an IBM 407 Accounting Machine circa 1960 :)
@koijoijoe Жыл бұрын
No wonder we got the small bites. 3 hours! Haha that is amazing though THANK YOU for giving us this long form content. I watch a skateboard podcast that puts out interviews between 2 and 6 hours every week, and have been for years. There is still interest enough for it among the want for shorter and shorter stuff.
@75slaine Жыл бұрын
What a fantastic interview, thanks so much Dave. Thoroughly enjoyed it.
@JamesQMurphy Жыл бұрын
I’m a DevOps guy. I’m adopting the term FCIB (described approximately at 2:00:30) and using it this very Monday. Might even make a meme out of it. Love it ❤
@badrakhariunchimeg10314 ай бұрын
Table keeper guys then
@daysiewaysie11 ай бұрын
this was a fascinating interview, thank you Dave & Dave
@owenminor Жыл бұрын
This series is so damn awesome. Is there any chance you could get Mark Russinovich in on this OS history? From DEC times through scaring the integrity of Windows, to a MS employee to his work on VM's and containers, pre Docker, and onward into Azure?
@magohl Жыл бұрын
Now that would be an awesome episode!
@arpanmukherjee4625 Жыл бұрын
+1 for this. Azure is my favorite Public Cloud platform and I would love to see the CTO of it sharing his old days.
@Liriq Жыл бұрын
+1 for Mark interview. Though I think Mark's work is not as close to Dave's interests.
@harrylumsdon6773 Жыл бұрын
Add plus one for russnovich interview.
@Ddcvfddee2244 ай бұрын
He’s still actively contributing to the code, I’m honored to be able to work on the windows kernel which he firstly worked on decades ago when I havent even born:). All the design he made and the code he wrote is just a masterpiece, which is incredibly still working the same way that he did in 2024! (You will know what Im saying if you are the engineer, and understand how impressive is this). He’s always my role model in my whole career, and will always be, to help design a software as perfect as possible.
@alexprykhodko3097 Жыл бұрын
Amazing piece of history. Thank you for making this happen!
@trentshea Жыл бұрын
Thanks for release. The short vids were a nice tease.