Fred Fish (November 4, 1952 – April 20, 2007) was a computer programmer notable for work on the GNU Debugger and his series of freeware disks for the Amiga.
Fred Fish | |
---|---|
Born | November 4, 1952 |
Died | April 20, 2007 | (aged 54)
Known for | Fish Disks |
Spouse | Michelle Fish (née Norman) |
Fish worked for Cygnus Solutions in the 1990s before leaving for Be Inc. in 1998.[1]
In 1978, he self-published User Survival Guide for TI-58/59 Master Library.[2] It was advertised in enthusiast newsletters covering the TI-59 programmable calculator. Fish also initiated the "GeekGadgets" project, a GNU standard environment for AmigaOS and BeOS.
Personal life
editFred Fish was married to Michelle Fish (née Norman) at the time of his death. He died of a heart attack[3] at his home in Idaho on Friday, April 20, 2007.
The Amiga Library Disks
editThe Amiga Library Disks – colloquially referred to as Fish Disks (a term coined by Perry Kivolowitz at a Jersey Amiga User Group meeting) – had a reach that included most all Amiga users in the world.[4] Fish would distribute his disks around the world in time for regional and local user group meetings, which in turn duplicated them for local distribution. Typically, only the cost of materials changed hands. The Fish Disk series ran from 1986 to 1994. In it, one can chart the growing sophistication of Amiga software and see the emergence of many software trends.[1]
The Fish Disks were distributed at computer stores and Amiga enthusiast clubs. Contributors submitted applications and source code and the best of these each month were assembled and released as a diskette. Since the Internet was not yet in popular usage outside military and university circles, this was a primary way for enthusiasts to share work and ideas.[5]
References
edit- ^ a b "Fred Fish". Archived from the original on December 24, 2008. Retrieved 2017-09-25.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), Green Blog. - ^ Fish, Fred (1978). "User Survival Guide for TI-58/59 Master Library" (PDF). rskey.org. Retrieved 2018-06-19.
- ^ "Richard Fish - Fred Fish will be missed". sourceware.org. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
- ^ Moss, Richard (2023-01-10). Shareware Heroes: The renegades who redefined gaming at the dawn of the internet. Unbound. p. 40. ISBN 9781800181106.
- ^ "Fish disks 1 - 1120". www.amiga-stuff.com. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
External links
edit- Fish Disks
- Living his LifeLong Dream at the Wayback Machine (archived October 24, 2013)
- Announcement of first Fish disks
- Geek Gadgets Project at the Wayback Machine (archived October 16, 2013)
- Fred Fish memorial archive at the Wayback Machine (archived December 8, 2013) - research in progress, explicitly welcomes Wiki usage.