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First and foremost, I want to express my deepest sympathy to John's family, relatives, and friends. I just recently learned about John's passing while doing some searches for him and his involvement with Ugobe. I did not know John personally, but I wanted to present this so that everyone knows that the legacy of John will live on in the thousands of owners of the Ugobe Pleo robot. John and Caleb Chung were the two designers of Pleo and we owe them a lot for their outstanding contributions towards the creation of the artificial life form, Pleo. The Pleo robot is an amazing accomplishment and even to this day it stands out as a shining example of artificial intelligence. There are a number of user groups around the world that support this awesome robot. Two of the more prominent groups that come to mind are http://bobthepleo.com/forums/… and the Facebook group https://www.facebook.com/grou…. I'm a member of both and have posted in each about the sad loss of a great man. As I read through everyone's condolences, I realized that John was truly a very gifted and kind soul and very profoundly touched the lives of all that had the honor to meet him.
David Luis Ortega
Torrance, CA, Long Beach, CA, Winchester, MA

I am so deeply saddened, after almost two years later, to hear of John’s passing. Shortly after his diagnosis, we kept in touch sporadically and then lost touch. Now 2023, I though of John and felt it was time to re-connect. A brief Google search sadly brought me here.

I really don’t know where to begin but the beginning. John and I worked at Davidson and Associates, but as I was a composer in the Sound Department we had no overlap. Tyler Wilson set up a meeting, because Tyler knew I had all sorts of weird ideas about all sorts of things. Fortunately, John was born to hear weird ideas about all sorts of things and we grew closer in our personal and professional lives.

We lived around the corner from each other in Belmont Shore and I fondly recall walking to his house for fascinating conversation. In 2000, I moved to Massachusetts to pursue a doctorate, but John kept me close by in every way.

At Neurosmith, John flew me back to Long Beach where we engineered the play pattern for Musini. I recall that week well: John standing up at his work bench behind me, furiously coding, and me cranking out fragments of music chunks that could be used to prototype. We were very sympatico in our working styles and I feel honored to have contributed to several Neurosmith toys.

After that, our ideas became even more fun and strange. As part of my Psychology research, John prototyped a box that helped me code entropy in human conversational patterns. It actually worked. For a while we had an idea for sensors in a restaurant that registered the ambient volume and adjusted a playlist of music to suit the energy in the space. We dabbled in an ambient version of Musini, and John and his team at Symbeeco championed Lumies (later SymbeeStars). While the product never quite manifested, it was a fun, wild ride.

I recall John’s visits to me and my family in Winchester, MA, and regardless of the weather, we would take a stroll with his ever-present flip-flops, taking a lazy, meandering route both in space and thought.

These walks ended up representing John’s indomitable positivity, for after his diagnosis, John would often tell me how much he was still able to do and how much he appreciated the ability to hike in nature, even after he wasn’t driving anymore. His spirits always high, John astounded me with his ability to focus on the gifts that he had been given.

In kind, John truly was a gift that had, and still has, been given to me.

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Today I stood up in First Par…
Today I stood up in First Parish of Sudbury and said a few words about the passing of John Richard Sosoka. Also, I was recently cleaning our an old drawer and found this TAG return address. I will always miss him!
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I’m so sorry for your loss. I know this pain is difficult to deal with. One of the clearest teachings of God’s Word is that dead loved ones will return to life. (John 5: 28,29) So there is a reason for hope. A strong hope in God’s promises will help you to endure. Through endurance, you will experience that grand future in which Jehovah will “give you the requests of your heart.” He will satisfy “the desire of every living thing.” (Psalm 37:4) Things will get better soon”
Rick was wonderful at everything he did. He had an endless amount of patience, was always very calm and fair and could understand people's feelings. Rick also was a wonderful poet and writer. He had a wonderful sense of humor (much like my maternal grandfather) and a way with people that immediately put one at ease.  I am Rick's youngest sister and through my life I have always seen him as perfect in every way. Even with the PCA he endured.. during our times together  I would take him anywhere he wanted to go. To me,  even at the end of his illness, Rick was still the incredibly wonderful and perfect person he  was in my life. He always put others  first and was never mean or angry or judgmental towards  anyone.  Just a wonderful human being.  I miss him so much . Thank you everyone that has been a part of his life for sharing your memories and photos. My family truly appreciates the your sharing these with us.  Mom was always so proud of her blonde haired blue eyed son.  Sometimes he was too smart for his own good. We have many stories about his creativity getting him in trouble as a young boy/teenager.  A real treasure in our lives.

It seems strange to be writing this, to be writing ANYTHING about someone who is no longer earth-side with us; who continues to live on through his contributions he made to society and the impact he had on others..

From people he’s spent even small amounts of time with, to inventions he helped bring to life... that gave so much joy and learning.

In college while I was getting my degree in Early Childhood Education my dad was my BIGGEST fan!

I told him “there’s no money to come from this” and he told me “choose a job you love and you never have to work a day in your life. By teaching others, your work creates a legacy and love of learning”

I would often talk to him about the things I learned/saw and I was particularly excited to pick his brain about a certain preschool center that was “Reggio Emilia” inspired—

A really amazing concept if you chose to look into it!

Anyway the children had maybe 30 full minutes of “structured time” the rest of the time they could do anything they wanted! They were there for 6 hours!

Personally (prior to talking with my father) I felt like “children need structure they NEED direction! In order to learn!”

I remember telling my dad that their philosophy was- if a child wanted to choose to spend EVERY day in the blocks area they would let them!

He smiled and said something like “they are NOT doing the SAME thing every day though- they are learning to build new things and encounter and solve new concepts” ...

He went on to tell me that GOOD teachers can look at a child’s interests and teach them math, language, science and understanding based on what they are interested in.

He was right.. (as always) but the thing about my dad was he was NEVER cocky. You never got the sense of “I don’t even want to tell him because he probably already knows” ... you WANTED to talk to him!

.... To tell him the things you were learning about...And he was always there to listen and provide input.

I had a very eccentric science teacher in middle school that told us the story of Archimedes getting into the bathtub and discovering “volume” and exclaiming “EUREKA!”

I told my dad that story but left the “EUREKA!” Part out... we were at Mongolian bbq having a father daughter date and he listened and then said “eureka! He figured out volume!”

Very casually and not in any sense telling me that “I missed something”

I rolled my eyes and thought it was just something my science teacher said because she was eccentric.. but it truly WAS a part of the story! ...and my father knew it. Which is why he casually made a comment!

Perhaps that’s one of the things I’ll miss most of all- above the hugs, above the smiles, above sharing meals... the fact that he was such an amazing conversationalist and made you feel proud no matter where you were in your educational or life journey.

I was always so proud taking any of his inventions to a “classroom setting” and watching children light up when they figured out “how things work”. Music blocks being one of my favorites to bring in.

Those of you that are familiar with music blocks know that if you put the blocks in order (as per orders of colors of the rainbow) and put the same symbol (star, square, triangle etc.) in order it will create a song beginning to end.

I will never forget one little girl Tilly looking at all the blocks and spent time rearranging the blocks until they were “just right”.

She said “Emily! I did it! I made a song all by myself!” ❤️

Now I don’t know exactly how developing this product went into play... but I feel like my dad (and the production team) had this pure internal dream of “I DID IT!” In mind! And that was so magical to see in person!

This disease, PCA was particularly hard... when my dad was first diagnosed I had recently moved back home. I remember staying up so late one night and reading all about it.. I was bawling. He came out and asked me what was wrong..

I told him “dad, this disease is so unfair, you are going to lose the ability to do everything you love!”

He thought for a moment and said something along the lines of “ Emily, my entire life I have LOVED figuring out how to do things differently. I can learn to do things a different way, I can tackle each challenge as it comes... what makes me sad is seeing YOU sad, but I will be okay”

That’s my dad- so selfless and loving and caring. In his darkest diagnosis moment he was concerned with MY emotional well being?

So eager to tackle each new challenge and take life one difficult moment at a time.

For those of you that weren’t around- I’ll let you know- HE handled EVERY stage of his disease with grace and understanding.

There was one day while I was on maternity leave... I live 2 blocks from my parents house. My dad went for a walk with his best friend Molly sue (a mega mutt that I hoped would turn into a wolfhound.. but alas she was not).

A construction worker saw my dad take his shirt off and sit down for a moment. He thought my dad needed help and wanted to take him to safely..

In reality my dad was pausing and stopping to change his body temperature (mentally) so the heat didn’t bother him as much! Something that he would do regularly because he had control over his mind.. the mind/body connection is incredible and he was tuning into that.

Something he did sooo well before (that many know) he would be in freezing cold temperatures but wear shorts/short sleeves while everyone else was sporting pants/scarves and ski caps. Just with his disease it took some “extreme focus”.

This sweet construction worker brought my dad (and Molly, his dog) to my home. I was so worried when I first saw them!

I thanked him (the construction worker) and after I closed the door I looked at my dad and said “are you OKAY?!” He laughed and said “I’m fine! But HE wanted to help me, I know how much joy it is to be helpful to others so I let him bring me here!”

It was that very day I put the baby carrier on my dad and had him hold my sleeping 2 month old to his chest, to feel my fathers warmth and sleep so soundly so I could get basic housework done and not break my back.

My dad was HELPFUL! I would often come “kidnap him” my words.. but we would get coffee and I would leave him for short bursts with his grandson in the car so I could get dog food or pay a bill or get gas. He was truly a helper until his last breathe!!

I only hope to be half of the person he was. As a child I NEVER heard him raise his voice. As a new parent myself I hope I can channel his strength, his patience, his love.. and be the kind of parent he was.

The kind of parent my child deserves.

Isn’t it so appropriate these memories of my father are helping me to strive for more? Always a teacher. Always insightful.

My father, the incredible teacher. 

Reading these stories and seeing the memories others have of him has brought me immense joy!

I wish I was able to have more time with him... one mor conversation...

However I find comfort in knowing he truly lived, and he truly loved... all of those that have shared have truly showcased that. 

John championed the Wednesday…
1989, Long Beach, NY, USA
John championed the Wednesday volleyball game followed by homemade ice cream (Or was it Thursday?) As a transplanted East Coaster, I asked when the "rain day" was. He replied, "The What?"
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I first met John when he was giving a demo of an icon based GUI that he developed for the Computervision DCU, Display Control Unit. My GEEKy reaction was COOL!!! and my emotional reaction was "why won't management let us do stuff like that!" The DCU was a cutting edge framebuffer with a little bit of graphics smarts attached to it. A bit ahead of its time in 1982. Computervision also developed a GPU Graphics Processor Unit and a 32-bit CPU that were also ahead of their time, but, the management just saw them as tools to sell the CADDS software. The software outlived the hardware, as it did at so many companies.

In 1984, Computervision was Sun Microsystems first large customer and we also manufactured the Sun machines that CV sold. I was tasked with creating a WIMP GUI and I helped hire John and Robert Roessler as contractors. We holed up in a tiny office in the Dolly Parton building for months and months. John was doing the design and coding, Robert churning out most of the code and I was designing icons, writing code and mostly making sure the company would be able to build and maintain the software when John & Robert left. The UIM was similar the early Macintosh GUI, but smaller in scope. I think we were writing to the raw frame buffer. This was a bit before Windows was introduced and the X Window system was still a research tool at MIT. The UIM was a very solid product and used by some of CVs applications for many years.

After that, we would meet at SIGGRAPH every year. SIGGRAPH started in 1974 and was the preeminent conference of computer graphics. Eventually, the field of computer graphics diverging into games, entertainment, scientific and informational visualization. The computer graphics hardware vendors that powered it faded away as NVIDIA and a few other made high powered graphics a commodity. If John & I had not met before, we would definitely meet on Tuesday at 7:30 in line for the first showing of "the movies", aka the Electronic Theatre. It was the demo reel of the very best computer animation by the pioneers of computer graphics. First it geeky technique things and flying logos and then stories. My guess is that we kept that standing date for close to 10 years. We saw Luxo Jr. together, played crowd controlled ping pong, and saw cutting edge graphics enable the realm of scientific visualization. Many of those years I would be working in the trade show for Stardent, OKI and VolumePro. It was a great place for John to arrange meetings with various movers and shakers.

After the movies, we good go out for dinner and then wander the streets of whatever city was hosting SIGGRAPH well into the early morning. We would process all the new technologies we had seen at the trade show and the Emergency Technologies exhibition. It was an especially rich environment with all of the latest cutting edge computer graphics gizmos. We were 1/2 between the Dick Tracy watch and the Apple watch. We had some wild conversations about what was coming and we lived to see it become real. Those are treasured memories.
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Robert Cohen
2005, Boise, Idaho, USA
From the moment I met John, I found his energy amazing. When I first heard about Ugobe, I knew I had to learn more and be a part of it. I had a full time job, but robotics had always been my passion. I cold-called John and asked if I could meet with him. When I went to his office at Ugobe, I found John behind a desk with stacks of papers and books everywhere. He was so welcoming and excited about the future. Once I saw his passion and realized he was a true visionary, I begged him to let me work with him.

Working on the hardware and firmware for Pleo was the most rewarding job I ever had. I'd put in a full day's work at my "real" job, then stay up every night working on Pleo. It was a great experience and one that I will cherish forever.

In the future, I got more opportunities to work with John. His desire to teach was endless and we often had long design conversations that ended up with us building something to prove the theory. It was a true privilege to work with such an intelligent, patient, and forward-thinking man. What stands out for me most was John's kindness and gentleness. He spoke with purpose most of the time, and sometimes went off track which was wild. With his physiology background and his software/hardware knowledge, we got into some strange conversations.

John inspired me to have passion for what I wanted. He showed me that hard work pays off, and to never give up. If it does not work one way, try a different way.


Thank you, John, for opening a door for me that I would not have found without you.

Your Eager Student
Rob Cohen
I bought an original music blocks on eBay today. The new ones do not have the high quality speakers that were so important to John. I also added the DCU to the Computervision Wikipedia page because that is how I met John. More on that later.
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Thanksgiving 1972
Long Beach, CA, USA
Thanksgiving 1972
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John, talking to Adam at 8:00…
2003, Billund, Denmark
John, talking to Adam at 8:00pm
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The boat we took out for dinn…
2003, Billund, Denmark
The boat we took out for dinner
Getting ready for an evening …
2003, Billund, Denmark
Getting ready for an evening boat ride with the Lego development team
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On the boat the next day - J3…
2004, Incline Village, NV, USA
On the boat the next day - J3 was 14 on that trip and suddenly looked very grown up
At dinner that night - in my …
2004, Incline Village, NV, USA
At dinner that night - in my album I have written “looking great at a trim 204 lbs”
I’m sure Jan was recounting a…
2004, Incline Village, NV, USA
I’m sure Jan was recounting an amazing “remember when” John story from their Davidson software days, given the expression on her face.
Talking with Jan, our mentor …
2004, Incline Village, NV, USA
Talking with Jan, our mentor and Neurosmith’s investor, with her husband Bob.
Aug 2004 - headed out to the …
2004, Incline Village, NV, USA
Aug 2004 - headed out to the dock together
Don’t they look like they mig…
2004, Incline Village, NV, USA
Don’t they look like they might be discussing the physics of getting a swing to twirl as fast as possible?
Aug 2004: Emily, being twirle…
2004, Incline Village, NV, USA
Aug 2004: Emily, being twirled on the swing by her Dad, who also managed to hold on to Emma at the same time
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Aug 2004 - we met John and hi…
2004, Incline Village, NV, USA
Aug 2004 - we met John and his family at Jan & Bob’s house in Incline Village. John was endlessly patient with Emma. Together they watched as Emily twirled on the tree swing.

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John "Rick" Sosoka, II