As I mentioned before, I remember showing Dennis Leor's Unix clone he built
with it running on a Z80 / S100 box at an early Usenix and dmr commenting
he was impressed and that it reminded him of early Unix versions.
On Fri, Feb 7, 2020 at 5:10 PM Larry McVoy <lm(a)mcvoy.com> wrote:
On Sat, Feb 08, 2020 at 11:32:28AM +1100, Greg
'groggy' Lehey wrote:
Moving to COFF to avoid the wrath of wkt.
On Friday, 7 February 2020 at 18:54:33 -0500, Richard Salz wrote:
> BDS C stood for Brain-Damaged Software, it was the work of one guy
(Leor
Zolman).
I think it was used to build the Mark of the Unicorn stuff
(MINCE, Mince is not complete emacs, and Scribble, a scribe clone).
Correct. That's how I came in contact with it (and Emacs, for that
matter).
It may have been brain damaged but it compiled pretty tight code.
I spent at least 2 years writing code with BDS C, maybe more. Then moved
to a Unix PC and never looked back (rotating disk is a lot nicer than
floppies).
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