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The Origins of R AND CALCULUS

Now that is an interesting line, Ajay, and may help to defuse some frayed
tempers.

Newton, of course, minded very much. And that, really, is the heart of the
matter. For R-people (and I am one of them, so I don't use the term
pejoratively), clearly, mind very much, too. But only about part of the
story, it seems.

What is rather disconcerting is that they didn't rise up as one, to defend
the product in the spirit in which it was created. That is, from its origins
upwards, and roundly condemn a misleading article.

It would have been very easy for Mr. Vance to have written:

John M. Chambers, a former Bell Labs researcher who is now a consulting
professor of statistics at Stanford University, was an early champion. At
Bell Labs, Mr. Chambers had helped develop S, THE PROTOTYPE OF R, which was
meant to give researchers of all stripes an accessible data analysis tool.

Rather than what he did write:

"John M. Chambers, a former Bell Labs researcher who is now a consulting
professor of statistics at Stanford University, was an early champion. At
Bell Labs, Mr. Chambers had helped develop S, another statistics software
project, which was meant to give researchers of all stripes an accessible
data analysis tool."

Regards, Mark.
Ajay ohri wrote: