lacedeconstruct 21 hours ago

rare occasion where he gained a legendary status based purely on his work, I dont think I ever saw even a written interview with the guy

  • throw-qqqqq 19 hours ago

    He is a private man that does not like the spotlight IIUC. He refuses most requests for interviews, but they do exist.

    https://www.macplus.net/depeche-82364-interview-le-createur-...

    https://www.mo4tech.com/fabrice-bellard-one-man-is-worth-a-t... (few quotes, more like a profile piece)

    He keeps a low profile and let his work speak for itself.

    He really is brilliant.

    • userbinator 18 hours ago

      He has probably has no time for interviews and just focuses on working on his many projects.

      • appreciatorBus 9 hours ago

        I often think the world would be a better place if more people in the tech industry follow this philosophy.

  • hn_throwaway_99 17 hours ago

    I think this is such an important point. I know all about Bellard's main works. I actually have no idea what he looks like, I've also never seen an interview with him, and I've never read about his specific philosophies when it comes to different software engineering topics. In a world of never-ending bloviations from "influencers" and "thought leaders" it's so awesome to see a real example of true excellence.

IlikeMadison 20 hours ago

Bellard it the most genius programmer to ever exist, and the least known compared to other pseudo stars.

textlapse 19 hours ago

His consistency and craftsmanship is amazing.

Being an engineer and coding at this stage/level is just remarkable- sadly this trade craft is missing in most (big?) companies as you get promoted away into oblivion.

wyldfire 20 hours ago

There is! ACM grants several awards for scientists and more.

One such award is the Turing Award [1], given "for contributions of lasting and major technical importance to computer science."

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_Award

bArray 21 hours ago

If there were some form of "developed contributions to computing" award, his name is definitely up there. I think there could be a need for such an award - for people who reliably have created the foundations of modern computing. Otherwise it's almost always things from an academic context, which can be a little too abstract.

sxp 20 hours ago

Between ffmpeg and qemu, I always think of https://xkcd.com/2347/ when I see Fabrice's work. Especially since ffmpeg provides the backbone of almost all video streaming systems today.

  • makapuf 20 hours ago

    Except that ffmpeg and qemu are not maintained by Fabrice. He's one of the greatest programmers but he's not maintaining the internet.

    • treavorpasan 16 hours ago

      I suppose that if he were to maintain any of these projects, we would never see the new frontiers he has been conquering.