Xref: utzoo alt.folklore.computers:7793 comp.unix.internals:1282 comp.misc:10815 Path: utzoo!utgpu!cs.utexas.edu!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wuarchive!uunet!ns-mx!pyrite.cs.uiowa.edu From: jones@pyrite.cs.uiowa.edu (Douglas W. Jones,201H MLH,3193350740,3193382879) Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers,comp.unix.internals,comp.misc Subject: Re: Grace Hopper and The Bug Message-ID: <3495@ns-mx.uiowa.edu> Date: 7 Dec 90 20:52:11 GMT References: <28385@mimsy.umd.edu> Sender: news@ns-mx.uiowa.edu Followup-To: alt.folklore.computers Lines: 23 From article <28385@mimsy.umd.edu>, by tewok@tove.cs.umd.edu (Uncle Wayne): > > That may be true and I'm quite happy to believe that she didn't make > these claims. Unfortunately, I was never able to hear her speak and so > I don't have first-hand knowledge of her bug story. I've heard Grace Murray Hopper speak (she was only a Captain at the time), and when I did, she didn't claim to have found the moth personally, nor did she claim to have made the log entry. She did say that it happened where she worked (Aiken's lab) and that, whenever the machine failed after that, people would joke about there being another bug caught in the relays. By implication, this has been interpreted by many as her claim that the word bug, as applied to problems with computers, originated with that moth, but as others have noted, the verb to bug, meaning to annoy, may date back to Shakespeare, and the noun bug, meaning an annoying technical problem in a piece of equipment, dates back at least to Edison. Furthermore, the log-book entry itself "first actual bug ..." suggests that there had been many figurative bugs before it, and that this was the first bug that was really a bug. Doug Jones jones@herky.cs.uiowa.edu