Bell Labs's Ken Thompson, the father of Unix, has invented a new technology that could mean never having to buy a CD again.
Four hours after quitting time, the utilitarian, vinyl-floored hallways at Bell Labs are dark and bare; the only sound comes from massive fans cooling the louvered black tower-cabinets of a Cray supercomputer working through the night on some unimaginably complex calculation.
But here at the far end of a hallway, in a large, open space like a student lounge are sounds of human life. There's a soda machine and some whimsical mementos - an old Indiana license plate with the word UNIX on it, a Beavis and Butt-head poster, and two pink plastic lawn flamingos perched incongruously atop a 4-foot room divider. Just below them sits their owner, a big, long-haired, balding man with a ferocious scraggly gray beard and gold-rimmed bifocals that reflect the monochrome 23-inch video monitor on the desk in front of him. While a couple of hyperactive young programmers stand 10 feet away, bickering about bandwidth and scribbling equations on a white board, the bearded man scrolls through a list of song titles from the 1950s. He clicks a mouse button. Almost instantly, the sentimental sound of "All I Have to Do Is Dream," by the Everly Brothers streams from a couple of bookshelf speakers wedged among stacks of computer documentation.
The bearded man's name is Ken Thompson, and he's been at Bell Labs for almost 30 years - his entire working life. He has a private office, but he uses it only as a mail drop. From around 1 p.m. each day till 10 or 11 at night, he sits on a contoured office chair in the communal area he shares with nine other computer scientists. This is where he writes computer code, oblivious to the conversations and the clicking of many keyboards around him.
Thompson has gained legendary status in computer science. He invented Unix, an operating system of such flexibility, portability, and power that it has dominated industry and academia for more than two decades and is now used worldwide on almost all hardware above the micro level - this includes systems that sustain the Internet. But Unix is only part of the story. Thompson has done original work in areas ranging from artificial intelligence to audio compression (his current interest). Throughout his career, he has been guided not by corporate policy or by profit, but by his own quixotic impulses.
In scuffed sneakers, old jeans, and a baggy red gingham shirt that hangs untucked like a Kmart kimono, he has the presence of a hippie Zen master - calm, detached, and totally self-sufficient. Moreover, despite his dilapidated garb and unkempt hair, he maintains a role of quiet authority. He's an elder statesman treated with deferential respect by his young co-workers.
Thompson's love affair with electronics dates back to his childhood. He recalls that when he was 12 years old, living with his family in southern Texas, he "started hanging around a local radio sales-and-service store. I just kind of lurked there. It was run by a guy named Fred Schultz. Pretty soon, Fred started taking me out to fix transmitters mounted on the local oil rigs. I would scramble up the rig and unbolt the transmitters and bring down pieces of them."