Ben Collins-Sussman is an American software engineer, composer, and author.[1] He is the co-creator of the Subversion version control system, co-composer of the musicals Eastland,[2] and Winesburg, Ohio,[3] and co-author of two books on software and management.[4][5] He co-created two interactive fiction games, Rover's Day Out and Hoosegow.[6] Collins-Sussman lives and works in Chicago, Illinois.[7]
Software
Collins-Sussman is one of the founding software engineers of the Subversion version control system,[8] which was used by 36.9% of developers in the 2015 Stack Overflow Developer Survey.[9] Collins-Sussman co-founded the Google Chicago engineering office in 2005,[7] which employed more than 300 engineers as of 2019.[1] He was a senior engineering manager leading a team focused on the latency of Google's search engine.[1]
Books
Collins-Sussman is the co-author of the book Version Control with Subversion along with C. Michael Pilato and Brian Fitzpatrick, published by O'Reilly Media in 2009.[5] Collins-Sussman and Fitzpatrick co-authored Debugging Teams: Better Productivity through Collaboration,[10] about managing software development teams, published by O'Reilly Media in 2015.[4]
Musical compositions
In collaboration with Andre Pluess, Collins-Sussman co-composed the music for two musicals, Eastland and Winesburg, Ohio.[11][12]
Eastland
Eastland is a musical telling the story of a 1915 disaster in which the passenger ship SS Eastland capsized while moored in the Chicago River, killing 844 people.[2] The musical opened in June 2012 and ran for 9 weeks.[11] It was produced by the Tony Award-winning Lookingglass Theatre Company and was nominated for four Joseph Jefferson awards.[11]
The reviewer for Time magazine, Richard Zoglin, wrote, "The elegiac mood, a sense of hard-working, turn-of-the-century Americans betrayed by the American dream, is heightened by the somber, folk-ballad flavor of the music — much of it played (on guitars and violins mostly) onstage by members of the cast."[2] The Chicago Tribune arts reviewer Chris Jones wrote, "Pluess and [Collins-Sussman] are richly talented songwriters [...] whose rootsy melodies understand the musical language of the ordinary Midwesterner."[13] The Chicago Time Out reviewer, Oliver Sava, wrote that the score "evokes O Brother, Where Art Thou? and Ragtime, though the lyrics can get heavy-handed."[14]
The Chicago Tribune arts reporter Chris Jones wrote that "one is most struck by the beauty of the vocal music that Pluess and Collins-Sussman] have woven into Anderson's poignant prose."[15] The Chicago Reader reviewer, Justin Hayford, said that "composers Andre Pluess and Ben [Collins-Sussman] create a haunting anthem revealing the town's inner life. It's a stirring opening, intricate in its dark shadings."[3]
Interactive fiction
Collins-Sussman co-created the interactive fiction title Rover's Day Out with Jack Welch, which in 2009 won the 15th Annual Interactive Fiction Competition, judged by the readership of the Usenet newsgrouprec.arts.int-fiction.[6] Games reviewer Jimmy Maher described it as "an impressively intricate, multi-layered piece of fiction."[6] Welch and Collins-Sussman also co-authored Hoosegow, which won the Casual Gameplay Design Competition #7 by influential game review website[16]Jay Is Games in 2010.[17]
^ abcCollins-Sussman, Ben (February 18, 2010). "Interviews with the Top Finishers of IF Comp 2009". Society for the promotion of adventure games magazine (Interview). Interviewed by Maher, Jimmy. Retrieved September 6, 2020.
^ abCollins-Sussman, Ben (October 23, 2006). "Interview: Google Chicago Engineers" (Interview). Interviewed by Karr, Chris. Gothamist LLC. Archived from the original on January 18, 2021. Retrieved September 6, 2020.