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_why is no more

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558 points by Jeremysr 16 years ago · 420 comments

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JeremysrOP 16 years ago

I just noticed that _why apparently deleted his twitter account. I then found that that wasn't all he deleted:

http://twitter.com/_why http://github.com/why http://whytheluckystiff.net/ http://poignantguide.net/ http://hackety.org/ http://shoooes.net/

All disappeared...

For those who don't know who I'm talking about: http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_the_lucky_stiff

  • dazmax 16 years ago
    • pol 16 years ago

      What a mean-spirited thing to do to someone who just wanted to stay anonymous. It makes me sad and angry.

      If this is the reason _why decided to pick up and leave, I understand it. We have his code, it will live on. Perhaps he will return in another guise.

      • KVFinn 16 years ago

        >>What a mean-spirited thing to do to someone who just wanted to stay anonymous. If this is the reason _why decided to pick up and leave, I understand it.

        If that's why he quit though it's going to have the opposite effect. I doubt more than a handful of people cared to look into _why's identity before today. I've read the guide, watched his talks, and read probably 80% of his blog articles, and I never knew his identity was some kind of secret. But with the disappearance it's now on everyone's mind.

        There's a name for this effect but I can't think of it. It often comes up when somebody sues somebody else to remove some bit of information. The suit becomes a news story, and suddenly where 10 people might have known the information, the info is on the daily news as they cover the suit.

      • imbaczek 16 years ago

        mean-spirited? he gave the internet a challenge and somebody took it up, that's all.

        oh, and it doesn't have to be his real name, too.

        • scott_s 16 years ago

          By using a pseudonym, he implied he'd rather not be known by his given name. Telling the world his real then goes against his wishes. It is, at the very least, rude.

          That someone outed him is inevitable. But that doesn't excuse the act.

          • Semiapies 16 years ago

            Rude, I'd agree. No more, though - we're certainly not talking about exposing where Salman Rushdie's sleeping tonight. How rude, even, is an open question. This doesn't exactly rise to the level of pestering J. D. Salinger at his house.

            Trying to be anonymous is one thing. Trying to remain anonymous while writing books and blogs and making public appearances, all under one common identity, is downright quixotic and just a bit presumptuous. Simply saying his preference was to be anonymous doesn't really create much of an obligation upon the rest of the world. You can't actively be a public figure and avoid being public.

            • scott_s 16 years ago

              I actually agree with all of that, but it still requires one person to say "I want to out him!" And that person is being rude.

              • Semiapies 16 years ago

                I agree. I'm just not sure how rude.

                When there's a picture of you in your Wikipedia article from a public event you chose to speak at, you've made yourself just a "Hey, I know that guy!" away from being outed. At that point, I don't think you can claim it's a major affront when someone puts public information together to identify you.

                I think the "who is why the lucky stiff" blog is odd and a bit dickish, but I'm not appalled.

                I'm also skeptical of that purported outing as the cause of all this; this is one story I think that a bunch of people chatting and commenting are precisely the least well-suited way to work out the truth.

                • eli 16 years ago

                  For what it's worth, Why actively campaigned at one point to have his wikipedia page deleted.

                  Say what you will, but I'm pretty sure he was genuine in his effort not to be identified or celebrated.

                  • Semiapies 16 years ago

                    It's possible to be truly unidentified and uncelebrated. It's not possible to do so while maintaining a specific identity, especially after it becomes well-known. That he maintained this identity well after it gained celebrity wasn't exactly forced on him.

            • ahoyhere 16 years ago

              Except that this enigma was something just about everyone treasured about him. He's a Ruby community treasure, our slightly twisted crown jewels. And the reason nobody tried harder before, or if they did they kept quiet, was out of respect for that cherishing.

              He has always seemed a bit delicate, and that's why the rest of us always treated him gently. And he repaid us ten-fold with his quirky gifts.

              This is like the rape of a beloved children's character. Not just learning that the Easter Bunny isn't real, but learning it when a drunken cop knocks out the kindly old man in the bunny costume, rips its furry head off, and pisses in it.

              It's Just Not Done.

              Just because the door is open, doesn't mean you have to walk through it. Adults consider the wider impact of their actions, rather than doing something just because "it's a challenge."

              • Semiapies 16 years ago

                Personally, I like _why, "Jonathan Gillette", or whomever he actually is, because of his humor, talent, and kindly style.

                As to the rest, it might be best not to assume we know what's going on in this situation.

              • benjaminbooth 16 years ago

                As a long-time Rubyist and admirer of _why, I completely agree with this.

                The whole thing saddens me. I wonder how _why could ever repeat such a public endeavor, even under a new guise.

          • petercooper 16 years ago

            "Outing" is when you publish private information about someone. In this case the e-mail headers were both in public space. Highlighting something that's already public is not the same as breaking someone's confidentiality.

        • astine 16 years ago

          Did he literally put out a challenge or do you actually see a person's privacy as a game?

          • moe 16 years ago

            The wikipedia page shows an image of him apparently giving a public speech. If his privacy was so precious to him I don't think he would do things like that. Hence I would say this was just a little game - and he lost.

            • astine 16 years ago

              If his privacy was so precious to him I don't think he would do things like that.

              But you don't know, and neither do I. It looks like someone played this game, and we lost.

            • watt 16 years ago

              privacy must be respected, and actually should be enforced by everybody, including you. meaning: even if you know him, you should pretend that he is anonymous person, disconnecting the _why persona from the real-life person.

              for example, if you know him, and you hire him, you still should ignore the on-line _why persona, because for privacy purposes, it is separate, anonymous entity, and you should not connect it to real person. that's what privacy should be.

              • moe 16 years ago

                I honestly don't get the futz about this.

                Also the whole "if you hire him you're obliged to ignore any other identities you know about" is just completely out of this world.

                Again: If he valued his privacy so much then why did he appear in public? You can't have your cake and eat it, too.

              • Vitamin 16 years ago

                Uggh. If privacy must be protected by civic order it's already a lost cause. All these good people standing up for privacy--it only serves to increase the market value of violations.

                Honestly, I think it's better to throw out the notion of digital privacy entirely and start pushing the notion of universal visibility, and accountability. Once everyone is naked, we'll stop obsessing over the naughty bits.

                • csallen 16 years ago

                  The anonymity and lack of personal accountability provided by the internet rarely have good effects. What's interesting is how fervently people fight to protect this anonymity, even though it doesn't really exist when we interact with strangers in the real world.

                  I'm not saying that online privacy is worthless of course, just noting that it is quite unique.

              • adambyrtek 16 years ago

                Privacy is not the same as anonymity.

            • judofyr 16 years ago

              Apparently, giving a public speech didn't reveal his identify, so why shouldn't he "do things like that"?

            • Adam503 16 years ago

              a public speech where? a programming language conference. No disrespect intended to anyone here, but making a presentation at the technical conference does not make one either a public figure.

        • Keyframe 16 years ago

          I don't know why are you downvoting him - HACKERS of all people should understand the nature of challenges - be them called for or not.

          • eli 16 years ago

            Even if I accept that explanation, posting the information online is no challenge. That's just being a jerk.

          • lil_cain 16 years ago

            Not every challenge is meant to be taken up.

            Respect for people's wishes is important too. It's quite clear that _why didn't want people to know who he is. Fair enough, if you wanted to work that out. I don't think you should, but I could understand it. Telling the world? That's trying to wave your E-penis at the cost of one of the ruby world's best contributors.

      • apotheon 16 years ago

        I don't think it was mean-spirited. I do, however, think it's a crying shame.

    • petercooper 16 years ago

      I'm sure someone in the know told me his real name a couple years back (he wrote the foreword to my book) and it certainly wasn't Jonathan Gillette. Of course, he might have changed him name again.. :)

      • lylejohnson 16 years ago

        Ditto. Unless _why goes by multiple names in real life (which I suppose is possible), that's not him.

        • maurycy 16 years ago

          It is possible that Jonathan Gillette and _why worked in the same company, and _why used Jonathan's computer, or so.

          • petercooper 16 years ago

            To update, I've received a few anonymous e-mails with significant proof that the Jonathan Gillette theory is sound (though I won't go far as to say it's 100% certain).

      • jvdh 16 years ago

        This might also be the reason that _why just upped an ran. Staying anonymous is one thing, but letting someone else take the hit for you is quite another.

        disclaimer: I don't know how long the blog has been trying to figure out who _why is.

    • mosburger 16 years ago

      Something doesn't seem right about that detective work - there's a Jonathan Gillette online who is a web developer in Harrisburg, PA who doesn't seem to be _why. Obviously it's likely that there's more than one Jonathan Gillette on the internet, but it seems odd to me that this other guy is also a web developer, with a decent online presence, in (somewhat) the same geographic area where _why is suspected to live, that isn't him.

      But I don't know enough about e-mail headers to provide an alternate explanation if there is one.

      EDIT: This is that other guy's site, FWIW: http://jonathangillette.net/

      And he's on twitter: http://twitter.com/jgillette

      EDIT 2: The infamous Zed Shaw posted a link to another page which I'm more inclined to believe is the real _why. I'm not going to post the link here, but you can find it in Zed's twitter stream if you really want to.

    • infodig 16 years ago

      I am posting this because I feel it is worthwhile information. It is within _why's rights to yank his sites off the Internet at a moments notice. I will not begrudge him that. However, I do think when people come to rely on your tools and software you should at least respect that people rely on you, if informally.

      Also, I think that, since he was hosting a lot of other sites on hobix, not just his personal stuff something could actually be wrong. So I am sharing this information. Please be responsible.

      I dug up a Kylie Gillette who is the owner of snapd.net, Snapdragon Jewelry. A quick whois on that domain: Registrant: Layered Technologies TheLuckyStiff Why 1647 Witt Rd. Ste. # 20 Frisco, TX 75034 US +1.9723987998 86a756e735644786cd09875d0acb61365fb02f36@whois.gkg.net

      So there is also this: http://www.assessor.slco.org/test/cfml/Query/valuationInfo.c...

      What are the chances that a Jonathan Gillette hosting a website for Kylie Gillette who posted to a ruby mailing list as _why and Jonathan Gillette in 02 and 03 are different people? If something is wrong or something has happened to him IRL people would rest a little easier knowing what is going on.

    • UncleOxidant 16 years ago

      but that was over a month ago, why would he wait that long?

    • blasdel 16 years ago

      misuba on HN said his first name is Michael: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=683061

    • jpeterson 16 years ago

      Nope, whoever created this site was trolled.

    • scorpion032 16 years ago

      Ok, Now, who did this?

    • sabat 16 years ago
  • fizx 16 years ago

    Google cache is still live:

    http://74.125.155.132/search?client=safari&rls=en-us&...

    Edit: Also, twitter search results:

    http://search.twitter.com/search?q=%40_why

    Notably:

    racheltostring: RT: @_why: programming is rather thankless. u see your works become replaced by superior ones in a year. unable to run at all in a few more. about 21 hours ago from TwitterFox

    • tremendo 16 years ago

      programming is rather thankless...

      Maybe he read http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=771057 in Re: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=771013 ?

      • pygy 16 years ago

        He's got humor, you know. That pun chain doesn't seem offensive to me.

        Thanks for putting up the link.

    • delackner 16 years ago

      This is exactly why such a complete self-deletion is worrying. I wasn't around in the neolithic days of the internet, but some people may remember that an early formative event in the WELL days was that a very well known and active contributor to the site deleted his entire posting history and then commited real life suicide. I dearly hope this has not happened and _why has simply moved on to other things...

      • geira 16 years ago

        I guess you're thinking of Tom Mandel. First, he deleted his posts after a tiff with his ex-fiance. Also, he died of lung cancer, not suicide. Full story here:

        http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/5.05/ff_well_pr.html

        • delackner 16 years ago

          I don't remember the fellow's name, but the anecdote was related in a book about online communities written by Clifford Stoll, and definitely involved suicide, not cancer. But the anecdote he related could have been incorrect...

    • basugasubaku 16 years ago

      He was (understandably) a bit sensitive about new works displacing his. He almost seemed to suspect some sort of conspiracy against Hpricot:

      "Clearly, the benchmarks you see on Ruby Inside are skewed to favor Nokogiri... Why not treat Hpricot fairly and use it properly in the benchmarks? It reeks of something."

      http://www.ruby-forum.com/topic/181699

      • petercooper 16 years ago

        As the editor of Ruby Inside, I can confirm we (or me, as author of the piece) were not involved in any conspiracy or malicious intent against Hpricot. Heck, Why even wrote the foreword for my book :)

        Further, the benchmarks we republished were not by us, but just a screenshot of benchmarks shared by the creator of Nokogiri.

        • thismat 16 years ago

          This bothers me honestly, why would you accept benchmark screenshots from someone that made claims against another persons code?

          Was this an interview or something? Was _why alerted to this as a chance to refute the claim by providing his own benchmarks? Could the data even be validated and not easily doctored?

          • petercooper 16 years ago

            The benchmarks were from what was designed to be a fair test. It might not have worked out that way, but that was the intention of the creator nonetheless. I stuck a massive disclaimer on my link to those benchmarks and let people at it (since NO benchmarks are EVER undisputed - biggest lesson I've learned). The post is at http://www.rubyinside.com/ruby-xml-performance-benchmarks-16... if you want to see how it was portrayed.

            If everyone had to bother validating all the third party bits and pieces that get referenced on blogs, no-one would blog. Blogging is a "hey, check this out, I ain't saying it's true, but you might find it interesting" type of affair - it's not the New York Times (which is why regular journalism is foundering; it's expensive to fact check everything and, heck, it's a Ruby blog, not a trusted source of journalism).

  • daveungerer 16 years ago

    I managed to dig up a PDF copy of his Poignant Guide to Ruby over here: http://www.ember.co.nz/resources/whys-poignant-guide-to-ruby...

    Anyone who hasn't checked it out yet, do yourself a favour. And for the rest of us, who would like to remember this anonymous creator of cartoon foxes.

    Let's hope it's just a quarter life crisis and that he's back soon. Or that he finds something else that makes him happier than programming.

  • mtodd 16 years ago

    Holy shit... _why is why I'm a Ruby developer to this day, especially the Poignant Guide.

    So very sad.

    • mr_justin 16 years ago

      Why is it sad? Because he deleted his accounts? Or are you assuming something bad has happened to him and his accounts where deleted by somebody else?

      Why strikes me as the kind of person who would delete his online presence on a whim, just because it would be fun.

      • mbrubeck 16 years ago

        It's sad because (if the sites don't come back) it'll be harder for other people to find and enjoy his work that I enjoyed. And it's sad to think that maybe he won't come back and publish more awesome stuff. (But when I think about it, I doubt that someone with _why's drive to create will be able to keep from sharing for very long.)

      • Quarrelsome 16 years ago

        It is sad because the thought of no more _why is a sad thought. I'd love to see more of his books in the future, they were mind blowingly cool.

    • tcoffeep 16 years ago

      Same here :(

    • masonbrowne 16 years ago

      I was already digging into Ruby when I found out about _why... but he's definitely a big chunk of the reason I stuck with it for so long, AND served as a good vehicle for evangelizing Ruby to new people...

  • blaaaah 16 years ago

    Okay folks, let's not overreact. Odds are all of his sites are running on the same host, so someone screwing around could take them all down once inside. And if his twitter account used the same password...

  • sho 16 years ago

    That was pretty immature, to delete the repos as well. Sure, nuke your Twitter, who cares. But people might have been depending on the repos; it's a breach of trust IMO.

    Not impressed.

    • rcoder 16 years ago

      Have a little respect. Unlike most of us here, _why never profited directly on his online celebrity status. If he chose to remove himself from the 'net, it seems only reasonable that he would want to shut down public repositories he managed, if only to avoid the inevitable deluge of complaints about them going stale, requests for commit rights from other people, etc.

      The fact that you would care more about his shepherding of repositories which have been available to everyone else all along speaks volumes to me about the kind of attitudes that probably helped to drive him offline in the first place.

      • rntz 16 years ago

        > Unlike most of us here, _why never profited directly on his online celebrity status.

        Most of us are online celebrities?

      • sho 16 years ago

        I would like to think I have utmost respect for _why. I have certainly never said or done anything against him in the past, nor ever felt anything besides quiet appreciation for his efforts.

        If he wanted to quit, that's his right, of course. But at least give people a day's notice before he nukes everything, right?

        "The fact that you would care more about his shepherding of repositories"

        Care more about them than what? What else is there? I don't know what's going on. The repos were his work, they're all I know of him.

        You seem to detect this entitled, callous attitude in my words but I assure you it's a false positive. I have, or had, nothing but positive feelings for the guy. Never met him, spoken to him, or anything else really. But I have relied on his code, and in my book, when you release open source code there's a kind of implied promise that you don't suddenly delete the master repo in a fit of internet pique.

        if that's "the kind of attitudes that probably helped to drive him offline in the first place" then .. maybe he should be offline because I think it's pretty reasonable.

        • adbachman 16 years ago

          No, he shouldn't give people a day's notice.

          He doesn't owe it to you, he doesn't owe it to me. That makes two of us. Let's imagine we're not unusual in that regard. Who does he owe a warning, then?

          when you release open source code there's a kind of implied promise that you don't suddenly delete the master repo in a fit of internet pique.

          You're making a lot of assumptions, not least among them _why's motivations (should they even exist) for dropping off your radar. Again, he doesn't owe you an explanation or a warning.

          You were a user, not a co-owner of the projects, not an extensive financial donor (most likely), not an employer. The relationship is entirely one way. _why gives you things, you say "thank you", and move on. This is also the Internet we're talking about, if someone decides the content (repository or writing) should be made available again, it will happen.

          • gfunk911 16 years ago

            http://github.com/raganwald/homoiconic/blob/master/2009-05-0...

            why is awesome. he's one of the big reason I'm a ruby programmer. He's contributed so much to the community, and he doesn't owe anybody anything.

            If he deleted all his repos, sites, etc with no notice, then that was a dick move. It doesn't mean he's an asshole, it means he did one asshole thing. That doesn't mark him as an asshole, but it wouldn't change the fact that it was an asshole thing to do.

            If you're running for the elevator and I don't bother to hold it, that's an asshole thing to do. Maybe I saved your ass last week when you forgot to check in the fizbit and the client was pissed, whatever. That doesn't change the asshole-ness of my one action. And that's ok, we all do it. why's still awesome, even if possibly for an hour he was an asshole.

            • adbachman 16 years ago

              The elevator analogy doesn't really hold for me.

              It's more along the lines of one person in the office bringing in bagels every week for a few years, then one Monday morning they aren't there.

              The asshole isn't the one who stopped bringing in the bagels, it's the folks standing around the coffee machine empty handed, griping about not getting their weekly cinnamon crunch.

              "I wish Mike would've told us he wasn't going to bring in bagels today. What a dick move." Nope, doesn't work.

              But that's just the way I see what is happening here. I can understand the divide if you have a different perspective of what's going down.

              I agree that failing to hold the elevator is inconsiderate, but I disagree that simply putting information on the web constitutes entry to a similar social contract.

              • scott_s 16 years ago

                Bringing in bagels every day is active. Leaving existing software up is passive.

                • akd 16 years ago

                  Keeping software hosted is active. Let's say he waited until his domain name expired... then he could say "I'm not spending the $10" and let it go offline, and people would excoriate him then. He just chose to rip the Band-Aid off at once instead of in bits and pieces.

                  • lil_cain 16 years ago

                    I think, if he's posted up and said 'hey, I'm fed up with this internet thing. I'm taking everything down, can someone else host them', there'd have been a queue. Certainly, I'd have been very glad to host the Poignant Guide

                  • sho 16 years ago

                    They were hosted free on github and/or rubyforge. He had to go in and actively delete them. If he had done nothing, they would still be there right now and there wouldn't be all this kerfuffle.

                    • bunnny 16 years ago

                      AFAIK there are forks/mirrors of his work on GitHub; so why are you having such a hard time dealing with his repos being deleted by him? It sounds like you're just whining.

          • astine 16 years ago

            I'm going to agree with sho on this matter. If you provide something and give the impression that you will continue to provide it, you are partly responsible when people become dependent. You are certainly not required to continue to provide it, but you should at least give warning that those who were dependent have a chance to adapt.

            When you quit a job or end a contract you ordinarily give notice. It's the same principle, and a matter of courtesy. --- That said, I've no idea what's really going on here, so I'm loathe to pass judgement.

          • alexpopescu 16 years ago

            While I do agree that the author(s) of an open source project do not owe me or you anything, I'll have to disagree with you about what is an open source project. Once you've opened up your project it belongs to the community (and even if I'm not a lawyer I think that most of the OSS licenses speak in this direction). Anyways, I'm pretty sure we will hear soon about what happened and it will be easier to understand things.

            ./alex

            • bunnny 16 years ago

              _why isn't required to maintain his copy of the source forever. Other people have forked/mirrored his projects; deletion of his repos is an inconvenience, but something that can be recovered from.

          • sho 16 years ago

            Well, look, everything you say is technically correct. But my reaction remains the same. It's not about "rights" - I agree I have no "right" whatsoever to continue to benefit from _why's beneficence in perpetuity. No, _why hasn't breached any laws or contracts, but he has breached social norms.

            For example, this site. I think all would agree that we have no "right" to its continued existence. None of us pay or contribute financially to this site in any way whatsoever. And yet if PG suddenly changed his mind and deleted it tomorrow, with no explanation or warning - I would consider that to be very poor form, and I'd wager most others here would, too.

            Same deal. It's about basic respect for your audience, whether they were paying or not.

            • scott_s 16 years ago

              I think your point of social norms is an important one. You have the right to be rude, but people won't be happy with you if you exercise that right.

              • bunnny 16 years ago

                Did _why strike you as a guy who lived within the social norms? I mean, come on.

                I would like to also point out that the people who "won't be happy with you if you exercise that right" don't actually care about you any way... so what's the loss?

        • jonny_noog 16 years ago

          I'm with you Sho. _why's writings are in large part what initially attracted me to Ruby. I have nothing but admiration for his work. If one releases open source code, I don't expect them to support it for free or at all, everyone's time is their own. But at least leave the existing code up there or at the very least, give some notice that it will be removed.

          This of course assumes that he did do this intentionally and that he was not the victim of some kind of foul play.

    • patio11 16 years ago

      That was pretty immature, to delete the repos as well.

      They were git repos, right? I am new to git, but my understanding is you pretty much have to type

      git clone --i-dont-want-a-full-copy-of-the-repository-please-screw-me-over-if-the-master-vanishes

      to be in a position where you are "dependent" on the code (i.e. have looked at it, ever) and do not have a full copy of the entire project extending to the mists of prehistory.

      [Edit: apparently the actual command is

      git clone --depth (some number)

      I like my version better.]

      • pyre 16 years ago

        --depth does have some benefits... one of my friends tried to do a 'git svn clone' of his work's svn repo... he gave up after the process had been running for a full 3 or 4 weeks.

        That said --depth doesn't have too much use when it comes to native git repos though. Unless you have a ton of binary files in the repo and don't want the full history of all of them...

        • eridius 16 years ago

          If you want to git-svn clone such a massive repository (and either it was truly massive, or your friend's net connection sucked, or he was using an old version of git that had the bug where git-svn slowed down over time), you should copy it to your local computer. git-svn runs significantly faster when it doesn't have to deal with network latency.

          Edit: Also, --depth does have a use with git repos, namely if the git repo is accessible only over http, as downloading packs over http is kind of slow.

          • pyre 16 years ago

            I'll defer to my friend on this one. He's really heavily into the internals of git and keeping up with the mailinglist. This was about a year ago, and if there was any way to speed up the process I'm sure he tried it. I think that he said it had something to do with the number of branches that have existed over the years in the repo and trying to resolve all of them into git branches.

            • barrybe 16 years ago

              I think if he tried today he'd be much more successful. I remember using git-svn a year ago, and it had the problem where it would re-checkout every single file for every branch point, because SVN doesn't really keep track of branch points; a branch is just a "svn copy" of the root dir.

              These days, git-svn is much smarter about recognizing a SVN branch, so it doesn't have to re-checkout the whole world.

              • bendin 16 years ago

                I recently (less than a month ago) used git-svn to do a conversion of https://svn.dev.java.net/svn/hudson and discovered a few things.

                The git-svn clone was not made from the canonical hudson repository, but rather from a svnsync clone hosted on localhost accessed through the svn:// protocol. Nevertheless, the conversion took about three weeks on a 2.6 GHz Core2.

                There seems to be a memory leak in git-svn. The size of the git-svn process grew slowly and after about two weeks it was at 1.2 GB resident size, at which point the OS refused to let it fork. Thing is, this was a blessing in disguise. I was able to resume the interrupted clone with a simple "git svn fetch", and it ran much faster with the now radically smaller heap. This, worked so well, in fact, that I got into the habit of interrupting and restarting the process every evening and every morning. A few days later it was done.

                The problem seems to be the structure of the Hudson repository. All modules are in a single huge maven-style multi-module build under /trunk, but the branches and tags are not complete copies of trunk, but rather of individual sub-trees of trunk. This does not mesh well with how git sees the world. For git tags and branches are always for the whole repository. This mean,s that git has to work extra hard to figure out what's going in in a repository like Hudson.

                Because of the oddball structure of the Hudson repository, its history is not as browsable in git as I might have hoped. Still, it's proved to be an interesting experiment.

                Size: the complete history works out to 203MiB (.git/objects) in git, though 754 MiB including all the cruft in .git/svn. In Subversion 1.6 FSFS format the repository is 795 MiB.

                • pwmanagerdied 16 years ago

                  Just had git-svn acting wonky on me, found your post via Google and now my problem is resolved. :)

        • silentbicycle 16 years ago

          None of _why's projects were that big, so in this case it's kind of a moot point.

      • sha90 16 years ago

        Even without git, everyone has a local copy of the source on their machines, at worst we can get Hpricot back up without the commit history... but that's not the issue.

        The problem is GH was hosting all the Hpricot wiki HOWTO docs, which frankly, were invaluable resources to anybody using the library.

        It's perfectly fair to leave the community. Destroying the ability for others to use your past work, however, is pretty lame. I'm hoping this was a hack for the benefit of my respect for him.

    • antonovka 16 years ago

      Let's wait for the circumstances before passing judgement.

      • gamache 16 years ago

        Name some circumstances which justify pulling down a broadly-used open source project like Hpricot. At a certain point it must be admitted that a project has a life beyond its author.

        • matthewking 16 years ago

          He could have had his computer, or email hacked.. have to wait to see if we hear from him before we assume he actually cleared all the accounts himself.

          • gamache 16 years ago

            Sure, well of course if he got hacked then I am not gonna hold it against him. I just can't imagine anyone targeting _why.

          • sho 16 years ago

            That explanation seems highly unlikely, especially considering the lack of any messages saying as such.

            update: I assume I'm being downvoted because people do consider it a likely explanation? It would be utterly unprecedented AFAIK.

            • bunnny 16 years ago

              No, you're being down-voted because you're a selfish arse. Is the primary concern the slight inconvenience his disappearance will cause you?? ... to us, the answer is No.

        • rictic 16 years ago

          He hosted it on git, the source is still out there: http://github.com/defunkt/hpricot/tree/master

        • biohacker42 16 years ago

          It could be a dead man's switch. (But I'm really hoping it's not.)

          • paulreiners 16 years ago

            How exactly do you implement a dead man's switch for your online accounts? Do you just leave your account info for your estate's executor, lawyer, friend, or whatever and he manually deletes them? Or do you have some script that will automatically run and delete your accounts if you don't tell it not to every week or so?

            I've often what happens to people's free email addresses after they die. (I suppose nothing in most cases.)

            • mr_justin 16 years ago

              These (dead mans switches) are online services which can terminate accounts for you and send emails on your behalf. Some of them work by sending you an email once a month or so to check up on you, if you don't reply, the switch is triggered.

          • sho 16 years ago

            Interesting point. I wonder how many people actually implement such things?

            • biohacker42 16 years ago

              An acquaintance of mine did. I had moved to a different state. We kept in occasional email contact. And one day I noticed he had deleted his LinkedIn account. Found him in the obituaries, he had passed on a couple of months before. RIP.

              • mmelin 16 years ago

                Isn't it more likely that a relative simply requested LinkedIn to delete the account? A LinkedIn account doesn't seem relevant to keep online at all after the person has passed away. Facebook, on the other hand, leaves pages up but with most features disabled except for the wall and photos - something I'm unfortunately familiar with.

              • sho 16 years ago

                Wow. Thanks for the story. I hadn't heard any concrete examples of people actually doing that.

                Well yeah. Let's hope it wasn't that.

        • cheald 16 years ago

          With all due respect, they were hosted with git, which is by nature distributed. If it's broadly-used, no single person can destroy a repository. Copies of the hpricot repo are all over the internets.

          I don't disagree that it's inconvenient, but it's not like he nuked a SVN master repository or something.

        • TheProkrammer 16 years ago

          That's why we have DVCS these days.

          • gamache 16 years ago

            The fact that Hpricot used a DVCS is a godsend in cases like this, but we still confront the fact that the software's canonical source, including its documentation, is gone. That Sucks, DVCS or not.

        • jsonscripter 16 years ago

          He got owned?

    • mosburger 16 years ago

      You know, I've been mulling over this "was it an immature/douchebaggy thing to do?" question, and my gut was with the "leave this guy alone, he doesn't owe you anything, it's open source" camp initially.

      Then I thought - what if, e.g., Zed Shaw had done this? I have a feeling we'd all be calling for his head and claiming it was the biggest douchebag move he could make. So does _why get a free pass? Because he's so likable and has a special pedestal in the Ruby world?

      I honestly don't know the answer to that, but it made me reconsider my gut knee-jerk reaction.

    • arghnoname 16 years ago

      Yeah I think so too. My initial reaction was that this is his right, which technically I'm sure it is. It does call into question an unspoken rule of open source though, which is you can abandon your stuff if you want, but don't try to remove all traces, even if that is ultimately a futile act.

    • noodle 16 years ago

      assuming that this is a tantrum, yes. not impressed, only really detrimental. at least have the courtesy to leave your stuff as it is for the people who have and will benefit from it, instead of scrubbing it all clean.

      on the other hand, if this is a case of someone managing to crack/guess/etc his passwords and just wants to do some malicious damage, that would be too bad.

    • jamesbritt 16 years ago

      OTOH, I have to believe there are many people with copies of that code.

    • donw 16 years ago

      Agreed; it's really childish.

  • digitalhobbit 16 years ago

    Really hope he's ok...

    • antipax 16 years ago

      There's a phone number in his whois records for his domain names... though calling it would be a just a little creepy.

      • mudge 16 years ago

        I'll call him.

        • Arubis 16 years ago

          As great as it is to have a community that cares about an individual, _why was very happy to stay anonymous, and a few comments here purport that his sudden disappearance resulted from someone penetrating that anonymity. If that's the case, calling him (assuming that number is accurate) could be counterproductive.

          • Jem 16 years ago

            But the supposed outing happened over a month ago. I doubt he'd wait this long if that were the reason for his disappearance.

            I don't know the guy, and am not involved in the Ruby community. Nonetheless, that someone would call to make sure he's OK speaks volumes to me of his presence on the Internet.

        • PieSquared 16 years ago

          Do you mind saying what happened when you called?

          • duairc 16 years ago

            I just tried calling that number, I got an automated response from "<something... beginning with a?> Solutions" with a pretty generic "press 1 for sales", "press 2 for customer care"-type set of options. That was a bit disappointing, I really hope he's okay...

    • utx00 16 years ago

      why would he not be ok?!?! lets put this in perspective.

  • ejc 16 years ago

    Why the Lucky Stiff has become Why the [deprecated] Stiff. http://twitpic.com/ehkoy

  • wrinklz 16 years ago

    He changed his name to _when and is working on perl 6.

  • timinman 16 years ago

    _why got me back into programming and into ruby, first with "Try Ruby!" in the browser and later Hackety Hack. When I asked if I could use hackety to build a web app, he steered me toward rails. I've used tons of his library, especially hpricot.

    You're an important part of this community, _why. I hope you're not saying goodbye.

  • tylerhunt 16 years ago

    Judging by this, it looks like his account was hacked: http://twitpic.com/ehm2h.

  • andyleclair 16 years ago

    Maybe he's planning for a big star-spangled blowout and is getting us ready for it? Kind of like if MJ had jumped out of his coffin at the Staples Center to start singing Thriller?

    • timinman 16 years ago

      Actually this might happen, sometimes his sites go down before a new release, but what puzzles me is github.

  • rneufeld 16 years ago

    Domains are still up and registered to him...

    Strange indeed.

      Registrar..: gkg.net (http://register.gkg.net/)
        Domain Name: WHYTHELUCKYSTIFF.NET
    	Created on..............: 03-JAN-2002
    	Expires on..............: 03-JAN-2014
    	Record last updated on..: 24-DEC-2008
    	Status..................: ACTIVE
    
      Registrar..: gkg.net (http://register.gkg.net/)
        Domain Name: HACKETYHACK.NET
    	Created on..............: 25-FEB-2007
    	Expires on..............: 25-FEB-2010
    	Record last updated on..: 24-DEC-2008
    	Status..................: ACTIVE
    
      Registrar..: gkg.net (http://register.gkg.net/)
        Domain Name: POIGNANTGUIDE.NET
    	Created on..............: 20-NOV-2003
    	Expires on..............: 20-NOV-2010
    	Record last updated on..: 24-DEC-2008
    	Status..................: ACTIVE
    • eli 16 years ago

      Indeed. The web server appears to still be turned on too.

         $ curl -i hacketyhack.net
         curl: (52) Empty reply from server
    • Hexstream 16 years ago

      Thank god. Would be aggravating if they were picked up by a squatter.

  • geek4christ 16 years ago

    His last message to us all:

       @_why: an ascending homage to fish bones. culminating in a delicate canopy of mouse furs.
    
    RIP, online presence of _why
    • nevans 16 years ago

      That sounds a bit more morbid without the context leading up to it:

      _why: nailing a small ornate gold shelf at arm’s height above the bed for my cat to sit on. i give you: norton’s perch.

      _why: i should probably have little teeny shelves all leading up to it. with their own miniature portraits or doll banisters or something.

      strathmeyer: @_why Do cat structures last longer than programming structures?

      _why: @strathmeyer hard to say, i guess if this feline staircase falls into disrepair, i’ll swap in a circular queue.

      _why: an ascending homage to fish bones. culminating in a delicate canopy of mouse furs.

      I will truly miss why's wonderful whimsy. :-(

    • CraigBuchek 16 years ago

      So long, and thanks for all the fish....

  • jcl 16 years ago

    It looks like someone is in the process of mirroring what they can find:

    http://github.com/whymirror

  • h3h 16 years ago

    John Resig has posted a eulogy: http://ejohn.org/blog/eulogy-to-_why/

  • defunkt 16 years ago

    http://hacketyhack.net/ also

    This is a sad day.

    • pavelludiq 16 years ago

      http://tryruby.hobix.com/ too. THIS IS BAD!

      • dylanz 16 years ago

        Indeed. All languages need an online app like this!

        • sah 16 years ago

          That's my mission with http://codepad.org/

          • mshafrir 16 years ago

            Codepad is such an awesome site. I use it all the time to test/assess the results of a little bit of code on its own.

          • benoitc2 16 years ago

            Maybe you could try http://friendpaste.com :)

            • CraigBuchek 16 years ago

              Perhaps you missed the part about CodePad compiling/interpreting the input. It's not just another pastie site.

            • benatkin 16 years ago

              does this run code? take another look at codepad. It's not just a pastebin.

              • benoitc2 16 years ago

                Oh please! realtime discussions, revsions & more. Maybe you should be more attentive rather than wanting to make your point. I already said, idea of executing code is interesting. but then something should be found to execute also custom modules. that's all what I said and I would be happy to play with this idea.

                • benatkin 16 years ago

                  Sorry. You assumed I was curious about PasteBins because I'm curious about sites that let you run code on them. Now, it turns out that I'm slightly curious about PasteBins. I think they're slightly more interesting than URL shorteners. They're not nearly as interesting to me as sites that let you run code on them, though.

                  FriendPaste is neat, but it's not as daring as letting people run a bunch of different languages on your server like CodePad does. I imagine one reason it's not open source is that they're relying partly on security through obscurity. I would be if I were running such a site.

                  BTW, I did check it out more in depth, and its python interpreter runs "import datetime" and "print datetime.datetime.now()" fine, but gives an error than an md5 library is missing when you try to run "import urllib2". So it supports some standard modules but not all.

                  • benoitc2 16 years ago

                    I will definitly have a look on this feature. dunno how it can be generalized to all languages though.

                    • benatkin 16 years ago

                      I'd like to see a JVM version that could run server-side JavaScript and Clojure. From what I hear, it might be easier to sandbox.

                      I'd also like to see one that runs client-side JavaScript, but displays a warning and requires you to click to run it until it has been marked as not malicious.

              • benoitc2 16 years ago

                take a look on friendpaste this isn't just a pastebin too. For code running. Yes I missed the point. Maybe because I don't see how it could works on most code if you can't import your own modules. I would be happy to participate to such project. Is sourcecode of codepad around ?

                • benatkin 16 years ago

                  OK, it's a pastebin with embedding and revisions. How is that not "just a pastebin"?

                  Oh, nevermind, it's a #nosql site. I withdraw my argument.

  • TheProkrammer 16 years ago

    THE PURGES HAVE BEGUN! SAVE YOURSELVES!

    Seriously though, I hope he's /okay/....

    • donw 16 years ago

      Good point; hopefully he's not suicidal. Anybody know the guy personally?

      • technomancy 16 years ago

        Nobody knows much about _why. He's always been a mystery.

        • octover 16 years ago

          Definitely there are people that know _why. He has family and friends and such. He just is unique in his style and doesn't want to be famous for his art, he wants the art itself to be famous.

          • ddemchuk 16 years ago

            That ideal doesn't seem very consistent with his removing all of his work from the internet

            • bct 16 years ago

              Right, which is why a lot of people are inclined to believe that _why's not responsible for this or that there's something else going on.

  • tremendo 16 years ago

    That's really odd. Just yesterday he had picked up on Twitter again after a several-days/weeks hiatus.

  • carbon8 16 years ago

    FWIW, I noticed that all of his sites were down for a period sunday night, too. I figured he was just doing something on the server and everything was back up the next day. I didn't check his github or twitter, though.

  • timinman 16 years ago

    _why got me back into programming and into ruby, first with "Try Ruby!" in the browser and later Hackety Hack. When I asked if I could use hackety to build a web app, he steered me toward rails. I've used tons of his library, especially hpricot.

    You're an important part of this community, _why. I hope you're not saying goodbye.

  • random-passerby 16 years ago

    Couldn't possibly be that he's fed up with Open Source and the ruby community...

    • TheProkrammer 16 years ago

      Even if he is, taking down ANY trace of your online presence is highly unusual.

      • rcoder 16 years ago

        _why has always been an unusual guy. He has always prized his pseudonymity online, so I'm honestly not entirely shocked to see that he has decided to simply pack it up and move on.

        It's a sad day for all of us, but I hope and trust that he has good reasons for this decision. His contributions to the world of Ruby and programming-as-art will not be soon forgotten.

        • TheProkrammer 16 years ago

          Well true, and he likely cultivated his anonymity for just such an occasion...

          His legend will only grow...

    • gcb 16 years ago

      he did post some PHP projects lately....

  • mosburger 16 years ago

    Someone has already edited his Wikipedia page to mention his online disappearance.

    • techpeace 16 years ago

      Maybe the title of one of his RailsConf sessions gives us some clue: "A Starry Afternoon, a Sinking Symphony, and the Polo Champ Who Gave It All Up for No Reason Whatsoever."

    • mmaaxx 16 years ago

      and I deleted his "real" name that they put on there.

  • jamesbritt 16 years ago

    Rip it up and start again.

  • judofyr 16 years ago
  • davelee 16 years ago

    I wanted to try Potion, it might be too late now.

  • brianto2010 16 years ago

    It seems that not every account was taken down...

    http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/9c5on/where_is_...

  • don_gery 16 years ago
  • r1cky 16 years ago

    hacked?

  • _oldhat 16 years ago

    Old hat, but take a very careful look at p27 of Nobody Knows Shoes (pdf version) with the text: So flows hit the end and move down ...

    If that isn't Kylie ...

  • pnomolos 16 years ago

    :( Sad indeed.

  • mailboxtom 16 years ago

    Let _why-gones be _why-gones

  • mloy 16 years ago

    Being actively anonymous is an open invitation for having your identity discovered and released. He knew it was coming. Deleting any trace of himself was planned, it was not done in heat of passion after being outed.

  • TheRealPeteShaw 16 years ago

    You're all a bunch of suckers

  • joeycfan 16 years ago

    Holy crap this is a disaster!

    This guy is one of lord high masters of the geek art crafts and sciences.

    Where ever you are Why, I hope you're all right..

  • crapfactory 16 years ago

    you RoR guys are the sad ones, its all 100% cult of personality.

    get real he's only one person, if your community can't survive and thrive w/out him, it should die

    • banister 16 years ago

      first up _why was active in more than the RoR community (look at potion, shoes, unholy, etc). Secondly, the majority of comments have been directed towards the dramatic way in which he left and the fact he will be sorely missed.

  • khelll 16 years ago
mitchellh 16 years ago

_why was to the ruby community what willy wonka was to chocolate. Maybe, just as the fictional Willy Wonka secluded himself in his chocolate factory for so many years due to competition, _why is simply secluding himself in his programming factory.

Deliciously sweet chocolates (or libraries/books/hacketyhack/etc.) will hopefully magically still appear.

Maybe _why is simply going to oompa loompa land to get little helpers.

shaunxcode 16 years ago

Man - what a bum out. The talk he gave at art + code was awesome and seriously inspired me to focus more on educational material for teaching kids to program. I hope he at least gives a more valid reason for removing everything. I can understand letting something become dormant - but others can take what you have done and be inspired and or build upon it. That is not a slight to you it's just the way a system grows. Like layers of sediment upon rock upon sediment. If I ever discovered that a piece of my code/idea had made its way into something someone else had done I would be stoked not bummed out.

tsally 16 years ago

I suspect some sort of burn out. Honestly the guy was a machine. I remember looking at his commit logs for all of his public Github projects and wondering how he managed it. And mind you, that only accounts for code publicly released and doesn't address any private projects he might have been working on.

  • doki_pen 16 years ago

    I'm on the shoes mailing list and he recently made this announcement:

    Aug 3rd: <quote> Okay, wow, hello, I'm very behind on this list, I hope you will pardon me. I've been away for the summer, taking a break from everything.

    Well, enough of that, time's up: I hope to concentrate strictly on getting Shoes 3 done. While it's disappointing to see what a poor job I've done with Shoes, I am going to try to do what I can to aright the situation by at least getting us some more speed and stability. (As with all of my projects, it's just a toy experiment which is full of an unpredictable amount of both the sweet and bitter.)

    My hope is to release the final version by September 7th. Please, if you want something fixed for Shoes 3, it will need to be filed on github, in the issues section. Yes, I think that will work just great.

    _why </quote>

    Perhaps this is a publicity stunt to popularize the new and improved Hackety Hack?!

carbon8 16 years ago

Apparently he tweeted this yesterday (quoted from a retweet): "programming is rather thankless. u see your works become replaced by superior ones in a year. unable to run at all in a few more."

But _why's contributions are largely irreplaceable. Yeah, software evolves and individual projects might be supplanted by others, but his contributions go way beyond simply writing functioning code.

  • wyw 16 years ago

    But _why's contributions are largely irreplaceable.

    Sadly this is not true for anyone.

    • joe_the_user 16 years ago

      Not in the programming world, which is sad.... but hopefully that isn't the only place we live in.

  • arghnoname 16 years ago

    I'm not in the ruby world, so perhaps that's why his contributions have largely been outside my sphere and there may be a great deal I'm unaware of. That said, when someone goes and removes their repositories and whatever other traces of their workproduct they have access to (as is their right), it might make people reluctant to use their products in the future (assuming they return).

    • rcoder 16 years ago

      _why has never really made "products" -- in fact, as far as I know, he's never made money from any of the stuff he shared online. (Sales of physical copies of the Poignant Guide may be the one exception to this, but IIRC, he priced it exactly at his cost in order to insure the widest possible distribution.)

  • grandalf 16 years ago

    There has been some negativity about hpricot lately:

    http://twitter.com/#search?q=Nokogiri%20hpricot

  • there 16 years ago

    Apparently he tweeted this yesterday: "programming is rather thankless. u see your works become replaced by superior ones in a year. unable to run at all in a few more."

    ironically he wrote "you" on twitter, and you wrote "u" on hn.

    • JeremysrOP 16 years ago

      It's from a retweet I believe, where the retweeter replaced "you" with "u", perhaps to fit it into 140 chars.

  • embeddedradical 16 years ago

    burn out?

hvs 16 years ago

Is it just me, or does Ruby tend have these "personalities" more than other communities? Seems like the Ruby community focuses a lot on the "rockstar" mentality. I don't spend any time in it to know for sure, though.

  • netghost 16 years ago

    He was more like ruby's Batman than rockstar

  • pavelludiq 16 years ago

    _Why is more like a fairy tale character than a rock star. What qualities of his persona do you consider to be rock star qualities?

    • bd 16 years ago
    • hvs 16 years ago

      By "rock star" I just meant the lone, dedicated, popular, and generally charismatic developer that has a lot of people talking about how great he/she is. A personality.

      Again, I don't travel in Ruby circles, so I don't know of _why and can't speak about him personally. I just seem to hear about specific developers from the Ruby circle more than, say, C#.

    • scott_s 16 years ago

      Wearing sunglasses during a talk.

  • callahad 16 years ago

    Which is why I love Zed Shaw's response:

    "Hmm, I think it's more possible that _why got hacked than he pulled a me." http://twitter.com/zedshaw/status/3409334842

    • tptacek 16 years ago

      What, the fact that he managed to make this about him?

      • unalone 16 years ago

        Followed by: "Oh boo hoo, people know who you are. Fucking take Karate lessons and STFU."

        Sometimes people ask why it is that a lot of us dislike Zed Shaw, despite his being bright and talented and sharp. Stuff like this is why: For all that's good about him, he remains a douche who likes making assumptions about people, sticking to said assumptions, and then acting like the mandate of heaven shines down on him.

        I got into a flamewar with him once. Used to be I thought he was a great guy, albeit a blowhard, who exposed people who did dumb things. Sometimes he is. The problem with him is he still hasn't learned to calm the fuck down, look at other people's perspectives, and understand that knowing how to write an insult doesn't make you a wise badass no matter how many people online respond positively to such viciousness.

        • dkl 16 years ago

          Yes. People like this are like double-edged swords. They cut both ways (for and against you). It's only a matter of time before the blade is coming in your direction. Zed reminds me of Erik Naggum.

  • subbu 16 years ago

    People liked him because of the quality of the stuff he produced. I personally haven't seen rockstar qualities from him. Most of his work (code/blog) are to the point and of high quality.

  • petercooper 16 years ago

    Yeah it does. It's a bit like Linux-land has more interesting personalities than Microsoft-land or how skateboarders tend to be more exciting than WalMart workers.

  • stcredzero 16 years ago

    Smalltalk had it's share of personalities. I am witness to drama at OOPSLA that would have made for some damn good movie scenes. But all of this predates YouTube, Blogs, Twitter, etc...

  • jeremymcanally 16 years ago

    Maybe we just have more interesting people? :)

  • compay 16 years ago

    Yes it does. Actually it's one of the reasons I like the Ruby community.

mrflip 16 years ago

I've set up a mirror of re-forks of his repos at

http://github.com/whymirror

This isn't anything super-scientific, I just forked the first google hit for site:github.com "fork of why/THISREPO" -- http://bit.ly/whyrepo

Still missing: greg rb_parse_args skistrap processor chirrup

dylanz 16 years ago

I hope he didn't take my extremely down voted, (apparently) not funny, pun ridden comment on this article too seriously. My puns were harmless, I swear. Any comic drawn in programming text immediately makes me think of _why: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=771013

But seriously, reading _why's poignant guide to ruby back in the day was a breath of fresh air coming from Java, and wanting to try something new. His intermingled illustrations and humorous text made a programming book that I actually found enjoyable to read. Also, his contributions in terms of libraries and interesting apps has been awesome.

_why: My hats off to you fine sir! May you find goodness on your latest adventures!

  • jefurii 16 years ago

    i've taken the python path instead of the ruby one, but _why's poignant guide is simply amazing. the only programming book i know of that's both psychedelic and actually useful. well not as a reference, but great for expanding your mind. _why, if you're reading, blessings to you. i thank you for enriching my programming life, and i hope we hear from you again.

  • joeycfan 16 years ago

    I remember checking the Guide just for a joke, and on the FIRST PAGE I learned something - that you can delimit ruby numbers with _ for commas - 3_600 is a legal 3600 to ruby.

marcusestes 16 years ago

I have a feeling that this disappearing act is part of a ritualized collecting of energies that he needs to release Hackety Hack. He originally meant it to be ready for Art and Code and I have a feeling that many side-projects since then (including Potion) have been produced out of nervous energy misapplied to tasks other than his One True Project.

His feelings aren't hurt, I doubt that very much.

  • mbrubeck 16 years ago

    One of my favorite local (Seattle) musicians is Jason Webley. Every year or two he stages a big concert where he "dies" at the end in some staged way, then remains "dead" for the next 6 to 12 months, with no public appearances while he works on a major project. Then, usually on his birthday, he has another big event where he is "born" and then reveals the fruits of his labor.

DanielStraight 16 years ago

Well that sort of ruins one's day. I hope everything is alright with him.

zefhous 16 years ago

The Hpricot wiki is still live on github, and the website is still up too.

http://wiki.github.com/why/hpricot http://hpricot.com/

One of the most thoroughly documented libraries that I have used.

It's interesting that he gave a talk in 2005 called "A Starry Afternoon, a Sinking Symphony, and the Polo Champ Who Gave It All Up for No Reason Whatsoever" (from his Wikipedia article)

Anyone know anything about what he said about the Polo Champ in the talk?

grandalf 16 years ago

I noticed that people had been ripping on his code a bit lately... I think the Ruby community's embrace of Nokogiri really hurt the man's feelings.

_why has been a great contributor to the Ruby community... let's hope he reincarnates himself :)

timinman 16 years ago

_why got me back into programming and into ruby, first with Try Ruby! in the browser and later Hackety Hack. When I asked if I could use hackety to build a web app, he steered me toward rails. I've used tons of his library, especially hpricot. If you're listening _why; don't stop being generous - don't disappear without a trace.

brigleb 16 years ago

Very sad. No more chunky bacon??

I invite everyone to enjoy a video I set to some of his music, and reflect on his priceless contributions.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YReSQfSBz4k

ananthrk 16 years ago

The title is inappropriate (without really knowing what happened to _why). Only his online identify is no more!

  • mbreese 16 years ago

    I don't know about that. I think _why was his online identity... only sometimes he ventured into the real-world to talk to people.

    So, perhaps it is accurate, since it seems like the online persona has vanished, so in a way _why is no more.

    Maybe the real person needed to escape from the persona... who knows?

    • ananthrk 16 years ago

      Technically _why is his online persona and I can now understand/analyze your argument. But my first thought after reading the title was "OMG!!". Not fair.

  • mechanical_fish 16 years ago

    This sort of sloppiness makes me really angry.

    Perhaps that has to do with the day that I woke up to NPR on the radio, and the announcer said "Douglas Adams... bestselling science-fiction writer..." and I immediately knew, before even hearing the next word, that my favorite author was dead.

    I have flashbacks to that day. And I just had one now.

    Worst. Linkbait. Ever.

n8agrin 16 years ago

_why just posted a new repo on github: http://github.com/why/lol/tree/master

EDIT: Weird, the repo description is "wtf adam, are you this slow". Hope he didn't get hacked.

EDIT 2: original link is dead.

  • gamache 16 years ago

    That does not appear to be the same 'why' account as before. 0 followers, created today.

emullet 16 years ago

A guy I know used to work at Inetz. Here's a small chat exerpt from a few minutes ago... Confirmation that the guy that worked at Inetz is _why. Perhaps take it with a grain of salt.

emullet you worked at Inetz right?

friend 4:20 yeah

emullet 4:20 You work with a guy named Jonathan Gillette ?

friend 4:21 not allowed to answer that

emullet 4:21 lol why do you say that?

friend 4:21 but I've heard that a lot of his stuff "disappeared" today

emullet 4:21 ya you know whats up?

friend 4:21 nope

emullet 4:21 its very odd kinda cool he worked with you

rufugee 16 years ago

Interestingly enough, even an interview of his has disappeared, while others on the site continue to work:

HN post re: inteview: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=483207 http://_why.usesthis.com/ http://usesthis.com

netghost 16 years ago

That's terrible, his code and posts always brightened my day.

generalk 16 years ago

There's a new repository up on his Github: http://github.com/why/lol/tree/master

Description: wtf adam, are you this slow

I'm guessing he got hacked.

Edit: Nevermind, the repo's been deleted.

  • benatkin 16 years ago

    Apparently there's no holding period for deleted names on GitHub.

    If he wanted his twitter account to be taken by somebody else, he could have renamed it before deleting it. If you rename a twitter account, the old name is freed up instantly, but if you delete an account, it is held for an unknown period of time.

fogus 16 years ago

Perhaps he's rebooting his online identity?

http://www.jonathanpaulgillette.com/

randrews 16 years ago

I had a copy of Potion cloned on my machine, so I stuck it on Github. If someone has a newer one, please post it, or let me pull from you or something: http://github.com/randrews/potion

_why had a lot of projects, we can probably preserve most of them just with people pushing stuff they had cloned.

asenchi 16 years ago

Wow, one of the few personalities to ever remain truly anonymous on the Internet vanishes in a day. Sad sad day. :(

  • gaius 16 years ago

    No, his real name has been on HN before.

    • asenchi 16 years ago

      Do you have a link for this, as far as I know, no one knows his real name, job, etc.

      • alex_c 16 years ago

        The link I saw was removed by the poster pretty quickly, out of respect for his privacy.

        I'm sure you could find it, but... why?

      • burke 16 years ago

        http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1507505

        Though I'm not entirely certain the authors didn't just make up a name to fit the citation style. I don't see any reason why they would have any information the internet at large doens't.

        • mcantelon 16 years ago

          Doing a search for "ruby Malsky" brings up _why stuff. I think Malsky is a character in some of _why's works.

      • octover 16 years ago

        Do you think maybe his mom or someone might know his real name? There are people in the community that know his real name, but out of respect for his desired privacy, to let the art itself be famous instead of the artist simply refer to him as _why.

      • gaius 16 years ago

        I'm not going to spoil things, but it is findable.

  • scythe 16 years ago

    What about moot and weev? They're not members of the open source community, but they are notorious.

    • asenchi 16 years ago

      moot's identity was revealed. weev I've not seen any proof yet that he's been outed. I'll correct my post.

      • kinghajj 16 years ago

        If you're referring to moot's supposed identity "Christopher Poole," you're wrong. There's no verification that that is his real name, and I think it's just a joke. Just look at the initials: CP. For those of you who are uninitiated, "CP" is a 4chan meme for child pornography, and is closely associated with Pedobear.

pfisch 16 years ago

His job could have a stipulation in the contract that they own everything he creates. Wouldn't that make him potentially civilly liable for his open source contributions, as well as these books and other things he has made.

eapen 16 years ago

My guess is that he got hired by an intelligence agency.

nevans 16 years ago

I learned ruby via his blog, via his poignant guide, and via the older edition copy of the pitchaxe which he had hosted on his site. I really hope he's not going into seclusion for good. :-(

myobie 16 years ago

I was playing with hackityhack last night, trying to find a way to contribute to it. It's very important to me that young people have an easy way to learn programming and I think he was really on the right track.

RyanMcGreal 16 years ago

Version 0.5 of _why's Poignant Guide to Ruby is still available on Rubyforge:

http://rubyforge.org/frs/?group_id=183

igorhvr 16 years ago

Does anyone have a copy of all the source code he published?

Specifically, does anyone have a copy of his Potion (http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=425258) repository somewhere online?

emartin24 16 years ago

Don't assume that _why is the one removing his online identity...I've seen this happen with other people - and it was the work of a malicious hacker.

  • timinman 16 years ago

    I want to believe this, but then I remembered denial is one of the first phases of grief.

blhack 16 years ago

I'm sure this comment will get lost in all the clutter, but:

I, up until today, didn't give two shits about ruby. I know that I had heard of this craaazzzyyyy "Ruby on Rails" jazz from about a year ago, and I know that people talked about it all the time, but I grabbed onto my python, looked the other way, and called it good.

Now, I want to learn ruby...

This guy seemed like he was all about teaching people Ruby, perhaps this was an attention grab?

bartwe 16 years ago

_why and Zed walk into a formum, the matter - antimatter reaction destroys the net for Gigabytes around.

Arubis 16 years ago

At the risk of being a little insensitive, this is a very good argument in favor of DCVS's.

gourneau 16 years ago

"This is the true joy in life ... being used for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one ... being a force of Nature instead of a feverish selfish little clod of ailments and grievances complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you happy ... I am of the opinion that my life belongs to the whole community and as long as I live it is my privilege to do for it whatever I can. I want to be thoroughly used up when I die. For the harder I work the more I live. I rejoice in life for its own sake. Life is no brief candle to me. It’s a sort of splendid torch which I’ve got to hold up for the moment and I want to make it burn as brightly as possible before handing on to future generations."

-- George Bernard Shaw

http://tr.im/why_burn

I lament the departure of _why. However, it looks like his flame will continue to live on, even if he would have hoped otherwise. Thanks _why

hbeaver 16 years ago

I am very,very sad. He is one of the primary reasons I'm a ruby programmer too.

hady_af 16 years ago

I have an opinion I would like to share, from what am reading online, it seems that his last tweet was a bit angry at the programming world, us in a more specific term. Us developers whom have learned so much from him... What I feel is that it's like an anger wave inside him, that like "alright, people are not thankful for what I do, let's see what happens when everything goes down... now what will they do without me" dunno, but I cannot find an explanation of why even his source codes are down.. really hope he's blessed by god somewhere feeling better and if that's the case, being angry at us, hope he feels better soon. guys I think maybe we should do him a website, you know like a call for his return, who's with me?

luckyland 16 years ago

_why does as he wishes, and he has never seemed like the kind of person who lives with regret.

kjell 16 years ago

"this girl at the pool is draggin such a stack of foam noodles it’s like she’s a little beaver going to dam up the diving board"

from _why's twitter, 8/12/09.

I hope the guy surfaces somewhere soon. One of the most outwardly joyful computer folks I've ever seen.

lylo 16 years ago

it's the mystique, the razzle dazzle, the enigma. his fabulous body of work will live on, restored, uploaded and duplicated by hundreds of devotees and admirers. he'll be reincarnated. a _why by any other name would still smell as sweet. it's better to burn out than to fade away. ladies and gentlemen, elvis has left the building.

chaelus 16 years ago

I'm afraid my impression of _why from what I've read lately is that he wasn't exactly happy. Adding to that.. has anyone read the last few pages of chapter 6 of his guide recently? Apparently his sister was drinking and got alcohol poisoning or might have been on drugs. All in all it seems he was deeply troubled by this and by his deteriorating relationship to his sister. When did he write this and is this stuff about his sister true? I really, really hope it isn't and that he or his sister didn't do something tragic.

  • devynci 16 years ago

    I think that was all a joke. He likes to make up stories, you see.

    • chaelus 16 years ago

      Well thats the problem with people who tell lots of stories isn't it? You can never tell if a story is actually true or not.. At least it does seem to me to be a remarkably depressing section in an otherwise fun and quirky book.

avit 16 years ago

I feel compelled to dispatch an anonymous postcard to _why, just to say thanks. And to wish the best farewell. Maybe I'll find one with a furry animal on the front, like a lumberjack or something. Tomorrow.

You see, phoning seems rather creepy. And besides, I really don't have anything to ask him, or of him. He's taught us all so much already.

Yeah, a postcard seems best. Just a message in a bottle, a ping into the void. Naturally, the letter shall read in a language known well among those he has enlightened.

Thanks, old friend.

123581321345589 16 years ago

A traceroute to whytheluckystiff.com ends with http://cewki.com , which contains a link to this thread.

_why, you inspired me to be a developer.

datums 16 years ago

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EPzGpwnekg&feature=relat... Sounds like him.

thorn0 16 years ago

Jeff Yates' disappearance is the similar case. He is JavaScript developer, books author and creator of PBWizard, one of the very first WYSIWYG editors. He had site pbwizard.com with many articles. However only one of these article can be found in web today (http://www.dotvoid.com/2001/03/using-the-range-object-in-moz...).

ssn 16 years ago

http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://whytheluckystiff.net/

  • cpach 16 years ago

    If anyone's about to mirror the stuff on his web sites, it might be wise to act quickly. Wayback Machine always checks the current robots.txt for a given domain, so it's possible to block files that have already been archived.

yaskall 16 years ago

I keep asking myself: "Why _why?" and "_why, why?" and "Why _why, _why?" and "_why, why, why, why!?" and "_why, why, _why, why..."...

frankjones 16 years ago

Found this _why's tweet from Google's cache. I'm not quite sure what this is about - and everybody might have already seen this, but here goes:

"burying myself feet first in the woods with the hope that this will lead to a career as a much beloved and sought after mouth-under-a-rock."

Link to Google's cached _why Twitter page: http://bit.ly/2h5PKy

noodle 16 years ago

i couldn't help but think of this exchange when i saw the _why incident:

- Nobody died. How can you kill an idea? How can you kill the personification of an action?

- Then what died? Who are you mourning?

- A point of view.

Cain, Elbis O'Shaughnessy, and Abel, in Sandman: The Wake

(yes i'm double posting this, i feel that it is also appropriate here in the original thread)

devynci 16 years ago

Hey everyone! _why the lucky stiff's Flickr account still exists! http://www.flickr.com/photos/_why

Either he or the hackers or whoever is responsible for this forgot about his Flickr account.

ch0wda 16 years ago

camping 4eva!

  • masomenos 16 years ago

    note to downvoters: "camping" is a brilliant and bizarre microframework for MVC web apps, courtesy of our friend why.

kallistec 16 years ago

internet/_why #=> SystemStackError: stack level too deep

I remember reading on his twitter something like, "a caller asks: should I use hpricot or nokogiri? If you're not me, use nokogiri. If you're me, then stop being me"

yooshooa 16 years ago

in pursuit of this new knowledge

i have discovered that every... easily accessible (so far)... copy of his poignant guide to ruby

has disappeared as well

what an eff you

i'm pretty dissapointed.

if anyone has a copy, i would love to talk... i'm certainly the intended audience.

yooshooa@yahoo

delano 16 years ago

Thanks for all the fish, _why!

  • mattmcknight 16 years ago

    He should probably be the one thanking us for the fish. (And we should be the ones preparing for the imminent destruction of our planet).

aslakhellesoy 16 years ago

A few years back I read Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead. Somewhere in the middle of the book someone says "why the lucky stiff!"

Does anyone know what that means?

  • anigbrowl 16 years ago

    'stiff' is 30s slang for a working class person (as in 'working stiff'). This would be like saying 'he really lucked out!' today - a mixture of admiration and mild jealousy for someone's (possibly unearned) good fortune.

  • tcoffeep 16 years ago

    I read about that on Wikipedia. I've never read the book, though. There's just something about text and paper that doesn't agree with my stomach.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Why_the_lucky_stiff#Real_n...

  • lambdajones 16 years ago

    it means why is probably in a remote, hidden mountain village in Colorado.

  • timinman 16 years ago

    I'm pretty sure stiff is slang for dead person, but it gets used more generally than that, for example: 'working stiff', a working person nothing going for him.

sunaku 16 years ago

_why's actions remind me of a quote from Hagakure:

"In the Kamigata area, they have a sort of tiered lunchbox they use for a single day when flower viewing. Upon returning, they throw them away, trampling them underfoot. The end is important in all things." (emphasis added)

Rest in peace, _why! You were but a hero, but now you are a legend.

chanux 16 years ago

Loved his neat work why's poignant guide to ruby though I'm not a ruby guy. :(

But why he'd commit a virtual suicide like this?

teeja 16 years ago

Guess he wants to avoid the Mitnick Dilemma?

http://www.wired.com/beyond_the_beyond/2009/08/kevin-mitnick...

_giu 16 years ago

looks a little bit suspicious to me: http://twitpic.com/ehm2h (_why created a repository called "lol" 30 minutes ago)

  • timdorr 16 years ago

    Wrong. "why" created that account, which has only been a member since today. "_why" hasn't done anything.

    • mr_justin 16 years ago

      _why's account on github has always been "why", presumably because github does not allow an account name to start with an underscore.

      _why deleted his account and somebody snatched it up real quick

      • malvim 16 years ago

        Also, the only current repo in this account (now called "because" and not "lol" anymore) has been CLONED by two other people! They made some commits, even. wtf?

        • devynci 16 years ago

          The new /why account is a placeholder. The because repo is a thing that says some things about _why, stuff like theories on why he might have done it. Not a hack. (although I'm still not sure about the 'lol' thing...)

ivankirigin 16 years ago

but not totally gone on twitter: http://search.twitter.com/search?q=RT+%40_why

crnixon 16 years ago

It'd be a good idea to collect links to backups of his various projects. Does anyone have a copy of Hobix or Potion laying around?

  • calcnerd256 16 years ago

    Maybe his disappearance is an art piece about how things can or cannot be erased from the 'net.

devynci 16 years ago

http://stores.lulu.com/_why is gone too. :( Man, he really went to town!

mmaaxx 16 years ago

Maybe he just needs a break from the internet?

jpteti 16 years ago

His GitHub account is back! http://github.com/why

tcoffeep 16 years ago

:( A sad day.

doki_pen 16 years ago

A clue: http://away.autognosis.org/

levinalex 16 years ago

here's two more videos from _why from his OSCON 2005 talk: http://bit.ly/1atNHU ("Sinking Symphony" and "Foxes Tall and Small on Modules")

Action 16 years ago

What happened to him? Has he got any problems?

Zoasterboy 16 years ago

Why's dead. Ruby lives on.

obelix74 16 years ago

omg, where will I go for my hpricot documentation now?

ddemchuk 16 years ago

I would love to see _why come back as _whynot

elliottcable 16 years ago

Good riddance.

  • elliottcable 16 years ago

    Of course, downvote me because I’m not mourning somebody who, if you’ll notice, isn’t dead /-:

    • chipotlecoyote 16 years ago

      I'm betting they're downvoting you because your comment was kind of douchey. It's okay not to be concerned about Why's abrupt disappearance from online-ness, but slamming other people for being concerned about it? And "good riddance?" Really?

      • devynci 16 years ago

        Yes, but I agree with him: he will come back. It is unlike him to leave without a message.

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