Glen Bredon


Glen Eugene Bredon was an American mathematician who worked in the area of topology.

Education

Bredon received a bachelor's degree from Stanford University in 1954 and a master's degree from Harvard University in 1955. In 1958 he wrote his PhD thesis at Harvard under the supervision of Andrew M. Gleason. Since 1960 he worked as a professor at the University of California, Berkeley and since 1969 at Rutgers University, until he retired in 1993.
From 1958 to 1960 and 1966/67 he was at the Institute for Advanced Study.
The Bredon cohomology of topological spaces under action of a topological group is named after him.
In the late 1980s, he wrote the program DOS.MASTER for Apple II computers. He is the author of the programs Merlin and ProSel for Apple machines.

Personal life

In 1963, he married folk singer Anne Bredon, with whom he had two children.

Apple software

Bredon is the author of the programs Merlin and ProSel for Apple machines.
DOS.MASTER is a program for Apple II computers which allows Apple DOS 3.3 programs to be placed on a hard drive or 3½" floppy disk and run from ProDOS. Bredon wrote it as a commercial program during the late 1980s where it experienced widespread success; it was released into the public domain by his family after the author's death.
DOS.MASTER was created as a result of Apple Computer's abandonment of the DOS 3.3 operating system and its subsequent replacement by ProDOS. Apple provided a program to copy files from DOS 3.3 volumes to new ProDOS volumes; however, programs written for DOS 3.3 did not run on ProDOS volumes. DOS.MASTER enabled a widely installed base of previously ProDOS incompatible programs written for DOS 3.3 to be run under ProDOS. DOS.MASTER took a large ProDOS partition, formatted it as a file, and then created a series of DOS 3.3 volumes within that file. The program allowed the user to create one of four DOS 3.3 volume sizes: 140 KB, 160 KB, 200 KB, or 400 KB. Up to 255 of these volumes could be created on the larger ProDOS partition, space allowing, essentially simulating a very large stack of virtual floppy disk drives.

Works