This note gets a bit COFF-y; please redirect any replies
to that list.
USENIX Summer 1981, in Austin TX. First USENIX conference I
ever attended, and the first to which I travelled by train--
mostly.
I was somewhat shy about travelling in those days, but my
Caltech colleague Mark Bartelt talked me into going, and
suggested going by train. Except by the time I booked the
trip there was space available only from Los Angeles to
San Antonio and back, not onward from San Antonio to Austin.
But in those days I did a bit of cycle touring, often in
the company of my friend Brian Foster. Brian was also a
co-worker at the time, and was interested in attending too.
So we decided to travel together by train (in coach) to
San Antonio, arriving around 05h30, and spent the rest of
that day cycling, mostly up the frontage roads beside I-35,
to Austin.
After the conference we cycled back, mostly at night, which
was somewhat spooky (I remember seeing a thunderstorm off
on the horizon but we didn't get rained on) but saved us
a second dose of sunburn. They checked into a motel for
a day and a night until the return train came through at
02h55.
I have gone by train to nearly every other conference I've
attended since, but never again have I cycled. It was a
fun ride but a harder one than expected. In those days
of paper mapes, we visited the Caltech geography department
and plotted out what looked like a fairly smooth route,
with a slow but steady climb. The topo map we used had
a resolution of 50' altitude. Evidently the constant,
sometimes steep hills between San Antonio and Austin are
all no more than 49' tall.
It was a good conference too. One memory that sticks in
my head was Jim Joyce using Tinker Toys as a metaphor for
connecting Unix tools together.
Norman Wilson
Toronto ON