'Jamie W. Zawinski' (born
November 3,
1968[1] in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), commonly known as 'jwz', is a computer
programmer responsible for significant contributions to the
free software projects
Mozilla and
XEmacs, and early versions of the proprietary
Netscape Navigator web browser. He still actively maintains the
XScreenSaver project, used by most
open source Unix-like operating systems for
screenblanking.
Zawinski is currently the proprietor of the
DNA Lounge, a
nightclub in
San Francisco.
Biography
Zawinski was first hired by
Scott Fahlman's Lisp research group at
Carnegie Mellon University, came to California to work in Robert Wilensky and
Peter Norvig's group at Berkeley, and in the early 1990s was hired by
Richard P. Gabriel's
Lucid Inc., where he was eventually put to work on Lucid's proprietary Energize
C++ IDE; a major portion of the IDE was a text editor. Lucid decided to use GNU Emacs due to its free license, popularity, and extensibility. When the project ran into problems, Zawinski and the other programmers were forced to begin making fundamental changes to GNU Emacs to add new functionality; tensions over how to merge these patches into the main tree eventually led to the famous GNU Emacs/XEmacs
fork.
[2]
Zawinski worked on the early releases of
Netscape Navigator, particularly the 1.0 release of the
Unix version. He became quite well known in the early days of the
world wide web through an
easter egg in the Netscape browser: typing "about:jwz" into the address box would take the user to his home page (a similar trick worked for other Netscape staffers). Also due to Zawinski, users running a
Unix or
Macintosh version of the browser would see the Netscape
throbber change to a ship's compass when a page was loading.
Zawinski was a major proponent of
opening the
source code of the Mozilla browser, but became disillusioned with the project when it was decided that the code would have to be rewritten. He resigned from
Netscape Communications Corporation on
April 1 1999.
[3] His current occupation is now running the
DNA Lounge nightclub in
San Francisco.
Quotes
Peter Norvig in
Teach Yourself Programming in Ten Years: "One of the best programmers I ever hired had only a High School degree; he's produced a lot of great software, has his own news group, and made enough in stock options to buy his own nightclub."
''Zawinski's Law of Software Envelopment'' (also known as ''Zawinski's Law'') relates the pressure of popularity to the phenomenon of
software bloat:
Examples of the law in action include
Emacs and
Mozilla.
It may have been inspired by the humorous ''Law of Software Development and Envelopment at
MIT'', which was posted on Usenet in 1989 by Greg Kuperberg, who wrote:
See also
★
Greenspun's Tenth Rule
References
1. http://jwz.livejournal.com/profile
2. The Lemacs/FSFmacs Schism.
3. resignation and postmortem.
External links
★
Personal homepage
★
jwz's LiveJournal