I came to Hawaii to learn more about packet radio. Really.
The fact that I spent most of my time on the beach drinking Mai Tais was an
accident.
Honolulu is the home of Torben Nielsen, a man who has played an
important role in helping to spread the Internet into the Pacific Rim. The
University of Hawaii
provides the Internet link for several Asian countries,
particularly Korea and Japan.
He is also known for starting up the University of
Hawaii net work. Networking was not originally considered to be a high prior ity
at the University. In fact, it was such a low priority that nothing was
happening. Torben enlisted a few of his colleagues (including four department
chairmen), rented power tools, and started digging trenches.
For a total of U.S. $1,500, lots of hard work, and the extreme displeasure of the facilities
management group, the renegade professors managed to get four buildings linked
together in a network. The project was done so cheaply that they even salvaged
refueling lines from military aircraft to use as conduit.
Nielsen's laboratory is a windowless room lined with foam pad ding and absolutely stuffed with computers.
The Blue Book, Sun documentation, and various other books line the wall. Sitting
inside this room, it is hard to imagine that nearby is a world of beaches and
drinks decorated with paper umbrellas.
I arrived at 8:30 A.M. and Torben had
already been there for two and a half hours. When he mentioned this, I made the
appropriate polite noises of amazement. Torben looked at me like some shirker.
"I'll be here till 9:00 tonight and we do this seven days a week," he patiently
explained to me.
Needless to say, a leisurely lunch was probably not going to be
in the works here. I realized that my time slot in Torben's scheduling algorithm
was going to be limited, so I tried to learn quickly what I could about his work.
Getting lines up and running is what Torben is best known for, but he is rapidly
tiring of keeping pipes open and bits flowing. In stead, his interests are higher
up the stack in areas like videoconferencing, the
Andrew File System (AFS),
interactive books, and a wide variety of other applications.
The topic of the day appeared to be
SGML
and
ODA,
so we talked about revisable form document
architectures. In Torben's view, the Office Document Architecture is basically
useless. To him, SGML tagging is the appropriate internal format for a document.
As evidence he cites a commercial program that uses SGML as the internal
representation of documents. The SGML document is then moved through
TeX,
which
processes the tags. TeX is thus a formatting engine for SGML, which in turn
produces output in a language such as PostScript for final form representation.
In Torben's view, ODA fills the same intermediate role as TeX. You can use SGML
source and use it to produce ODA, which is then sent to some ODA reader for
display on the screen or the printer.
After this brief flurry of discussion on revisable form formats, Torben dismissed me and switched context to some other
work. I borrowed a terminal to read my mail.
When I left the cocoon of Nielsen's lab, it was still only 10 A.M., much too early to return to the Waikiki
tourist ghetto. I swung my car over the mountains to the other side of the
island.
After driving around the sugar plantations, I arrived in the little
town of Haleiwa. There, I spotted a sign saying "Best Lunch in Haleiwa." Afraid
that this might also well be the only lunch in Haleiwa, I pulled onto the back
lawn of the building, almost ran over a dozen cats and parked next to the
outhouse.
After a wonder lunch of Mahi Mahi and eggs smothered in a
hot sauce
made with lilikoi flowers, I felt much better. I spent the rest of the day in
exhaustive research looking for the perfect Mai Tai.