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Bob Pease Remembered For Pease Porridge And A Whole Lot More


Joseph Desposito

June 20, 2011

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It was late on Father’s Day, around 11:55 p.m., when I finally got around to writing my editorial for this issue, which was due the next day. I had some ideas of what I wanted to write about and was busy gathering information. One piece of information I needed was in an e-mail I had received a couple of weeks ago, so I launched Microsoft Outlook.

Rather than going straight to the e-mail I needed, I started skimming the e-mails that had come in over the weekend. The first one I came across was a notice that my niece had wished me a happy Father’s Day in a Facebook post. I clicked on the link, got on Facebook, and sent a reply. Then I went back to Outlook and continued skimming the e-mails. One subject line stopped me cold. It said, “Bob Pease Killed in Car Crash.” I read it in stunned disbelief. I looked at the sender: Paul Rako, the analog editor from EDN. It must be true, I thought. Horrible news, but true.

In part, Paul said that Bob was killed when his car left the road as he drove from Jim Williams’ memorial service yesterday. It’s doubly unfortunate that two of the greatest analog minds in the business passed in the same week. As it was earlier on the West Coast, Don Tuite was online and sending e-mails to our staff. He sent a link to a San Jose Mercury News article: “Driver, 70, Dies in Saratoga Crash.”

The short article stated all the facts: A 70-year-old San Francisco man was killed after his car hit a tree in Saratoga on Saturday evening, according to the California Highway Patrol. The man was traveling eastbound on Pierce Road at an unknown speed when he failed to negotiate a curve to the left at about 5:45 p.m. The driver’s 1969 Volkswagen Beetle veered to the right off of the roadway and crashed into a large tree on the right shoulder. The man was not wearing his seatbelt and it appears he was killed instantly.

Everyone who reads Pease Porridge knows that Bob drove a 1969 Beetle. Bob brought it up many times over the years and just recently in a popular column about unintended acceleration. Everyone knew this because Bob was unrivaled as a columnist in this industry. Though he was certainly an analog guru who could write about the nuances of a very difficult subject area, he also talked about everyday (and not so everyday) life situations.

Bob told me many times that his column was about thinking. Whenever he tackled a topic, he essentially welcomed readers into a dialogue about how to properly think about that topic, at least from Bob’s point of view. But, if you wrote to him, he would always consider your point of view as well and tell you what he thought.

Bob was greatly saddened by the death of Jim Williams. As you may know, Jim died recently after a massive stroke. During the following days, Bob corresponded with me about Jim. In one e-mail, which I think says a lot about the way Bob thought and lived, he said: “Jim did write more huge SYMPHONIES of big Apps. Systems. I wrote more small ones. We always had very similar ideas on helping Users with Analog problems: We never turned down a request for Analog help. We agreed on that.” Then, Bob said: “I am very SCRUPULOUS about taking my 5 or 7.5 mg of Coumadin every day. I don’t know if Jim was on Coumadin. Coumadin = Warfarin = Rat Poison, good for preventing Strokes.”

Bob also asked me to reprint part of a column on doctoring that he had written years ago about how to tell if someone was having a stroke. This particular column, “What’s All This Floobydust, Anyhow? (Part 14),” contains a section called DOCTORING STUFF, PART 4C—STROKE DIAGNOSIS.

In Bob’s grief about Jim, his first thought was to let the readers of this magazine know how to tell if someone is having a stroke. He starts off the section of this column by writing: “Many people know that in case of a heart attack or stroke, it is very important to get the victim to medical care very quickly, within much less than an hour. But what do we know about diagnosing such an unhappy person?” And he goes on from there to impart his knowledge on this topic and hopefully help someone save a life someday.

Unfortunately, we now have to say goodbye to Bob and all the wisdom he so generously shared over so many years writing for Electronic Design. He was a tremendous talent and we will miss him greatly. You can find his latest column in our July 7 issue.

You won’t be surprised to learn that he had the drafts for number of future columns in the works in addition to his popular “Bob’s Mailbox” collection of correspondence. We will work with his family on bringing those columns to you in the future. We think he would have wanted you to read them. And finally, wherever he may be right now, I’m sure he’s thinking about writing, “What’s All This Car Crash Stuff, Anyhow?”

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  • Clint Chaplin
    8 months ago
    Jun 28, 2011

    I remember Bob in two different ways. First way is when while I was in college my mother sent me a clipping from the local newspaper about somebody who had won a contest for the messiest desk, complete with a picture of the desk with papers piled up to the ceiling. It was, of course, Bob's.
    I also remember him when I cook chili; my recipe is an amalgam of several recipies, one of which was Bob's from one of his non-electronic columns in this magazine.

  • David Ecklein
    8 months ago
    Jun 23, 2011

    For some time I had wanted to email Bob Pease my appreciation for his ED
    articles over the years. Now the opportunity is gone. I am the same age
    as Bob, and was at MIT when we were undergraduates. He was a class or two ahead of me, but I remember him well from occasional contacts in the MIT
    Outing Club (MITOC) and seeing him run from class to class in his Limmer
    boots and short pants! With others, it would seem odd - however, Bob was
    not acting, but living the part.

    When I got to MIT, a raw and nervous freshman, MITOC recruited me and a few
    others for a day trip to Quincy Quarries, sort of a rock-climbing laboratory
    nearby. Bob very patiently taught me the ropes (literally), and I was
    hooked on the sport then and for a year or two after my BSEE.

    Bob was in the analog world even then, and I was in the digital world. So
    it was only much later that I found he had grown into such a giant. In MIT
    days, I was aware of his warm humor during MITOC outings, but did not
    realize his gift at getting it, plus much else to think about, on paper. I
    am sorry now that I did not email him my conflicting thoughts about his
    article on "fuzzy logic" some time back; I would have learned from the
    friendly but firm disagreement surely resulting.

    What's this about a compilation of Bob's ED writings over the years, anyhow?
    If it is more than wishful thinking, put me on the subscribers' list!

    Everyone who came in even brief contact with Bob will surely miss him.

  • Gregory Harrison
    8 months ago
    Jun 23, 2011

    Some people really mean a lot to you and are like your old friend even though you never met them. Bob Pease was like that, Jim Williams too. I would be with them in the lab, learning things about the circuits and electronics over the years, through reading their stories. I hope they have a great lab in Heaven.

  • Anoop Hegde
    8 months ago
    Jun 21, 2011

    Such a sad loss of a good person and an outstanding analog engineer.
    With all his knowledge and worldly wisdom, he was still a down-to-earth man.
    I had the privilege of exchanging some emails with Bob a month back, regarding
    an analog circuit someone published in EDN. He was very sharp, quick to
    point out the mistakes I made in analyzing the circuit, while at the same time
    offering corrections and further help. He was quick in scribbling a circuit,
    scan it and email it back right away.
    Other than reading his columns, I did not know him nor did he know me.
    But I will always appreciate his offer of unconditional help if I needed
    something in the analog circuits. He was sincerely interested in increasing
    knowledge and expertise of analog design in engineers and ready to
    invest his valuable time to do it.
    People like Bob are hard to come by. He left a big vacuum that is hard to fill.

    May Bob rest in peace.

    Anoop Hegde
    Milpitas, CA

  • Bob Landman
    8 months ago
    Jun 21, 2011

    I knew both Jim Williams and Bob Pease. Personally signed copies of both their books on analog design. Bob showed up at my office one evening, scared the heck out of my wife, yelling "is Bob Landman here?" (he was wearing his backpack and with that beard of his....). He brought the books to me on his way home to SF. Spent time with me, getting to know me, what I was doing. He wrote in his book the following:

    "Best wishes to Bob Landman - may all your troubles be middlesized: so you can find 'em!" RAP 18xii91

    Jim and I traded old Tektronix equipment (I'm an ex-Tek FE) as he was very fond of really good old Tek tube scopes, as was I. Jim remarked "I hope you have a good alarm system as I might be tempted to break in some evening and add to my collection!". Jim's wife was an MD at Stanford Hospital. Incredible that he would not have been taking a stroke preventative. His lab at home was incredible. His app notes (esp. the ones with the baby bottles) always fun to read.

    I just can't believe it - "RAP" is dead! I just re-read a hand penned letter to me (he preferred his scrawl to e-mail) on traveling to India. I knew he was the sage trekker to contact for advice on what to bring, what to see, etc..

    Bob was such a careful driver - he wrote a book on driving automobiles safely for young people!

    http://www.amazon.com/How-Drive-into-Accidents-Not/dp/0965564819

    Title: How to Drive into Accidents - And How Not to

    This is incredibly ironic, him of all people....

    I can't believe he would be unbelted. He must have been terribly upset at Jim's demise, or had a medical condition and was trying to extract himself from the car.

    Whenever I needed help, as many have written here, Bob provided it, and with his unique sense of humor.

    The industry won't be the same without these unique characters.

    My condolences to both the Williams and Pease families. I'm hearing from many of my friends who are grieving as I am.

  • Ken Whiteleather
    8 months ago
    Jun 21, 2011

    Always read his incredible column. Met him at a seminar in Orlando, Fl. a few years back. Corresponded with him via email ... he always answered. I consider him a true servant of engineers around the world! RIP, RAP!

  • M. Simon
    8 months ago
    Jun 21, 2011

    Dang. I had a couple of questions I was meaning to ask Bob. Bob and I had a very interesting e-mail exchange on PID loops (I like the chemical industry version). He will very much be missed.

  • Don Lipke
    8 months ago
    Jun 20, 2011

    I was shocked to learn that we've just lost two of our iconic spokesmen for the deep nuances of analog circuit design. Both were eloquent with words to describe their thought process for successful circuit design. I regret not having communicated with either after having had the opportunity for more than forty years as I learned from their articles.

  • Peter Ryan
    8 months ago
    Jun 20, 2011

    This is a truly monumental loss to the engineering profession in general. Bob's observations of the world and the way it works were extraordinary. I always turned to his column before reading anything else in the magazine because I felt that here was this wonderful mixture of compassion, insight and plain old common sense. Although I never met him, my life will be emptier with his passing .

  • Michael Violette
    8 months ago
    Jun 20, 2011

    Truly sad, but we are left better for the great contributions from both men. I only recently began following some of Bob's writings. Bringing clarity to some of the arcanity of design was his great gift and always appreciated his personal insights and observations.

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