First thing's first: I haven't seen the name "Trammell Hudson" before, nor does he seem to have any notable projects attached to him on his website (other than "I wrote some network drivers at Lockheed Martin"). There's no real reason for his extension of the chart other than to state "hey, look at the software we've been using on a large scale for the past 20 years" and infer that having a stable base set of software and protocols for the computer world is somehow a bad thing.
The article also doesn't seem to source anything outside of Rob Pike's original article, which itself I find a few flaws with. Notably, the article is written admitting that it's "darker than reality" and focuses solely on the negative. Of course systems research is going to look like a declining failure of a field if you look at it with an "everything is sh!t" attitude.
Perhaps if the article had some substance and not just an opinion that Rob Pike's article was right, I'd be able to agree with it. Unfortunately, I can't. It's a post by some blogger I've never herad of who has no professional or even self-admitted experience in operating systems design saying that operating systems design is dead because Rob Pike said it was 14 years ago.
Arto wrote:What do you think? Are we doomed to keep reimplementing Unix for the next half a century?
You can be if you want. I'm more than happy to find a better way to do things.