American computer programmer and author
Mike Muuss
Mike Muuss in 1999.
Born Michael John Muuss
(1958-10-16 ) October 16, 1958Died November 20, 2000(2000-11-20) (aged 42) Nationality American Spouse Susan Pohl
Mike Muuss (left) at the Ballistic Research Laboratory, using BRL-CAD to analyze the M1 prototype, with Earl Weaver (right).
Michael John Muuss (October 16, 1958 – November 20, 2000) was the American author of the freeware network tool ping .
Mike Muuss (center) sitting on the newly-installed Cray X-MP/48 at BRL, with Chuck Kennedy (left) and Doug Kingston (right).
Career
A graduate of Johns Hopkins University , Muuss was a senior scientist specializing in geometric solid modeling , ray-tracing , MIMD architectures and digital computer networks at the United States Army Research Laboratory at Aberdeen Proving Ground , Maryland when he died. He wrote a number of software packages (including BRL-CAD ) and network tools (including ttcp and the concept of the default route or "default gateway") and contributed to many others (including BIND ).[ 1]
However, the thousand-line ping, which he wrote in December 1983 while working at the Ballistic Research Laboratory , is the program for which he is most remembered. Due to its usefulness, ping has been implemented on a large number of operating systems , initially Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) and Unix , but later others including Windows and Mac OS X .
In 1993, the USENIX Association gave a Lifetime Achievement Award (Flame ) to the Computer Systems Research Group at University of California, Berkeley , honoring 180 individuals, including Muuss, who contributed to the CSRG's 4.4BSD-Lite release.
Muuss is mentioned in two books, The Cuckoo's Egg (ISBN 0-7434-1146-3 ) and Cyberpunk: Outlaws and Hackers on the Computer Frontier (ISBN 0-684-81862-0 ), for his role in tracking down crackers . He is also mentioned in Peter Salus 's A Quarter Century of UNIX and a link to his website’s ping page is included in How Linux Works (ISBN 1718500408 ).
Muuss died in an automobile collision on Interstate 95 on November 20, 2000.[ 2] The Michael J. Muuss Research Award , set up by friends and family of Muuss, memorializes him at Johns Hopkins University .[ 3]
See also
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External links