John Quarterman

John S. Quarterman (born April 27, 1954) is an American author and long time Internet participant. He wrote one of the classic books about networking prior to the commercialization of the Internet. He has also written about risk management.

John Quarterman (2006)

Biography

Quarterman grew up in the Bemiss community, near Valdosta, Georgia, USA.

He first used the ARPANET in 1974 while attending Harvard, and worked on UNIX ARPANET software at BBN (the original prime contractor on the ARPANET) from 1977 to 1981. He was twice elected to the Board of Directors of the USENIX Association, a professional association related to the UNIX operating system. While on that board, he was instrumental in its vote in 1987 to approve the first funding received by UUNET, which, along with PSINet, became one of the first two commercial Internet Service Providers (ISPs).

He co-founded the first Internet consulting firm in Texas (TIC) in 1986, and co-founded one of the first ISPs in Austin (Zilker Internet Park, since sold to Jump Point). He was a founder of TISPA, the Texas ISP Association.

He was a founder and Chief Technology Officer of Matrix NetSystems Inc., established as Matrix Information and Directory Services (MIDS) in 1990.

Quarterman published the first maps of the whole Internet; conducted the first Internet Demographic Survey and started the first continuing series of performance data about the entire Internet in 1993, on the web since 1995 in the Internet Weather Report, and also visible as Internet Average, plus comparisons of ISPs visible as ISP Ratings.

Inter@ctive Week listed John Quarterman as one of the 25 Unsung Heroes of the Internet in 1998, saying ..."As president of [MIDS], Quarterman, 43, is to Net demographics what The Gallup Organization is to opinion polls."[1] Internet World interviewed Quarterman at length with a full page picture in its June 1996 issue, as Surveyors of Cyberspace.

On September 21, 2006, Quarterman served as a panelist with Hank Hultquist and Michele Chaboudy at a joint meeting of the IEEE Central Texas Section and Communications and Signal Processing Chapters titled "Network Neutrality: Altruism or Capitalism" at St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas. He also organized a November 2, 2006 panel on Net Neutrality for EFF-Austin, featuring Quarterman and Hank Hultquist, Michael Hathaway, and Austin Bay.

Major works

  • The Design and Implementation of the 4.3BSD UNIX Operating System, Addison-Wesley, January 1989, ISBN 0-201-06196-1, Co-author with Samuel J. Leffler, Marshall K. McKusick, Michael J. Karels (describing a system which has been very influential on the TCP/IP protocols).
  • The Matrix: Computer Networks and Conferencing Systems Worldwide, Digital Press, 1990, ISBN 1-55558-033-5 (a comprehensive book on the history, technology, and people of computer networks worldwide).
  • Practical internetworking with TCP/IP and UNIX, Addison-Wesley, September 1993, ISBN 0-201-58629-0, Co-author with Smoot Carl-Mitchell.
  • The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System, Addison-Wesley, April 1996, ISBN 0-201-54979-4, Co-author with Marshall K. McKusick, Keith Bostic, Michael J. Karels.
  • Risk Management Solutions for Sarbanes-Oxley Section 404 IT Compliance, Wiley, 2006, ISBN 0-7645-9839-2.

Trivia

  • At RIPE-58[2] it was revealed by Daniel Karrenberg that John Quarterman originally came up with the acronym RIPE after seeing a slide made by Karrenberg that said: Réseaux IP Européens at a meeting in Brussels, 1989.[3]
gollark: You remind me of my friend who found out that you could press arbitrary buttons on certain Casio calculators by pressing three buttons in very precise patterns when turning it on, or I think four or more to do so while on.
gollark: Yes, since there are obviously finitely many of them.
gollark: Up to 16 nesting levels.
gollark: My solution just contains all possible JSON objects.
gollark: You can't do it with regular regular expressions.

References

  1. "25 Unsung Heroes Of The Net". Inter@ctive Week, March 30, 1998. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 22, 2001. Retrieved 2013-10-02.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  2. RIPE-58
  3. Karrenberg, Daniel (2009-05-07). "How the Name RIPE Came About" (PDF). ripe.net. Retrieved 2017-07-09.
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