So sorry to learn this. My favorite memory of jmk, though I never knew him 
personally, was from 2003, when I was still learning how to engineer and hack 
operating system kernels. He and I exchanged emails regarding the best way to 
audit a kernel’s networking stack, as I had found some bugs in the Plan 9 
TCP/IP stack that were remotely exploitable. His point was that I was way over 
thinking how to implement a working product, and I should focus more on being a 
*good engineer* rather than being a *perfect engineer*, and not worry so much 
about how perfect every line I wrote was. I’ll never forget how much that blew 
my mind at the time, an idea so simple, that even in a place as “elite” (to me) 
as Bell Labs, perfect was the enemy of good, even if innovation was the goal. A 
lesson I have carried with me from that day, which may have contributed greatly 
to the success I’ve had since then. 

Rest in peace, my friend. 

Don A. Bailey
Lab Mouse Security
https://labmou.se/
@InfoSecMouse

> On Jun 24, 2020, at 6:36 PM, Charles Forsyth <charles.fors...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> 
> I am sorry to say that Jim McKie (jmk) died suddenly on 16 June. 
> https://www.ippolitofuneralhomes.com/obituaries/James-B-McKie?obId=15111702&fbclid=IwAR3d7aHZXEOhYz-ciOrQPh-W1eMw-_8MHiCUdeKOxzLBEI6VGHsSn4aTjdk
> 9fans / 9fans / see discussions + participants + delivery options Permalink

------------------------------------------
9fans: 9fans
Permalink: 
https://9fans.topicbox.com/groups/9fans/Td73b359f9dc68c15-M45c2bb4a281a705a73167d99
Delivery options: https://9fans.topicbox.com/groups/9fans/subscription

Reply via email to