Tom Duff

Tom Duff in his office at Pixar

Thomas Douglas Selkirk Duff (b. December 8, 1952, named for his putative ancestor, the fifth Earl of Selkirk) is a computer programmer. He was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and grew up in Toronto and Leaside. In 1974 he graduated from the University of Waterloo with a B.Math and, two years later, got an M.Sc. from the University of Toronto.

Contents

Career

Duff worked at the New York Institute of Technology Computer Graphics Lab and the Mark Williams Company in Chicago before moving to Lucasfilm's Computer Research and Development Division. He and Thomas Porter, another Lucasfilm employee, developed a new approach to compositing images; their 1984 paper, "Compositing Digital Images",1 is "[t]he seminal work on an algebra for image compositing", according to Keith Packard.2 and "Porter-Duff compositing" is now a key technique in computer graphics. (See, for example, XRender and Glitz.)

Duff later worked for 12 years at Bell Labs Computing Science Research Center, where he worked on computer graphics, wireless networking, and Plan 93; in the course of the latter work, he authored the well known "rc" shell for the (Unix-like) Plan 9 operating system.

Duff has worked at Pixar Animation Studios since 1996.

Achievements

  • While working at Lucasfilm, he created Duff's device, a loop-unrolling mechanism in C.

Quotes

  • "Shared libraries are the work of the devil, the one true sign that the apocalypse is at hand." [1]
  • "Nobody really knows what the Bourne shell's grammar is. Even examination of the source code is little help." [2]

Miscellaneous

  • Tom Duff makes a cameo appearance in the Niven/Pournelle science fiction novel Footfall as a co-discoverer of the invading spaceship: "Chap named Tom Duff, a computer type, spotted it."
  • Tom Duff appears briefly in the documentary film "Noisy People" playing the banjo. [3]

See also

  • Mothra - A web browser Tom Duff wrote for Plan 9.

References

  1. ^ Thomas Porter and Tom Duff, Compositing Digital Images, Computer Graphics, 18(3), July 1984, 253-259. DOI:10.1145/800031.808606.
    (Available at pixar.com.)
  2. ^ Keith Packard's webpage about Porter & Duff's 1984 paper
  3. ^ http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/node/295#comment-2531

External links

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 12 December 2008, at 05:21.

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