I saw this a while ago and always thought it was interesting: I initially thought Knuth was an Apple fan after watching a few of his lectures, but apparently he uses his Macbook only for trivial everyday tasks.
"Remember, though, that my opinion on economic questions is highly suspect, since I’m just an educator and scientist. I understand almost nothing about the marketplace."
How wonderful to hear a person say that. Like, hey, I'm an expert at just this one field, not every field. Rare to see that attitude these days.
Yes, I appreciated that too. I wonder if the media has had an impact on this. In a TV interview for instance, it might be considered rude to refuse to answer a question.
I have been using my version of literate programming (markdown compiled with node : https://github.com/jostylr/literate-programming) for awhile now and I have to agree with him that it does become indispensable. I am already at the point that I can't imagine coding without it. Particularly now that I have embraced Vim and the fantastic outliner Voom.
Re-editable instead of reusable code struck me as right on target as well, though there is the issue of patches.
Thinking for oneself instead of following conventional wisdom seems one of the most important pieces of what ought to be conventional wisdom. It is a hard road to travel, though.
For every WM enthusiast here:
Screenshot of Knuth's setup: http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~uno/screen.jpeg
Knuth's fvwm2 config: http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~uno/programs/.fvwm2rc