I miss Brian on this list. I've interacted with him over the years, the
one I remember the most was I was trying to do an awk like interface to a
key/value "database". I talked to him about it and he sent me ~bwk/awk
which had all the original awk source and the troff source to the awk
book in english and french.
Ken, Doug, Rob, Steve, anyone, could you coax him onto this list?
If you want me to try first I will, I don't know if he remembers me
or not. But I can try and then maybe one of you follow up?
All, we just had about a dozen new subscribers to the TUHS list. Rather than
e-mail you all individually, I thought I'd use the list itself to say
"Welcome!".
The TUHS list generally has a high signal/noise ratio on the history of
Unix, the systems and software, and anecdotes from those who used the
various flavours. Occasionally, we drift a bit off-topic and I'll gently
nudge the conversation back to Unix history.
The list archives are at: https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/
and you should browse the last couple of months to get a feel for
what we talk about.
Cheers, Warren
https://bsdimp.blogspot.com/2019/10/video-footage-of-first-pdp-7-to-run-uni…
is a blog entry where I step through the evidence that the PDP-7 in The
Incredible Machine video that was posted here a while ago is quite likely
the PDP-7 Ken used to create Unix after its days of starting in Bell Labs
films were over...
Warner
I've lugged these around for 35-ish years. I'd like to seem them
scanned and stored someplace as permanent as can be found, so if
someone/anyone could tell me how to facilitate that, I'll package
them for shipping.
My apologies if this has already been done and I'm simply not aware of it.
I have other stuff that probably needs the same treatment, but
excavating the alluvial layers that have accumulated will take time.
Single small-format red binder:
Unix System User Reference Manual - AT&T Bell Labs
Unix System Release 2.0
including Division 452 standard and local commands
October 1985
Set of four small format gray binders:
Documenter's Workbench 1.0, April 1984
1. Introduction and Reference Manual, 307-150, issue 2
2. Text Formatter Reference, 307-151, issue 2
3. Macro Package Reference, 307-152 issue 2
4. Preprocessor Reference, 307-153, issue 2
Set of two slip-cased small format maroon/gray binders:
Unix System V Documenters Workbench Release 2.0
1. Technical Discusion and Reference 310-005, issue 1
2. Product Overview 999-805-007IS, User Guide 999-805-006IS,
Reference Card 999-805-008IS, issue 1
---rsk
I’ve got a few books I’ve just pulled off the shelf and no longer want/need.
I’m hoping someone will give them a good home.
UNIX System Labs Inc UNIX(r) System V Release 4
Programmers Guide: System Services and Application Packaging Tools
Device Driver Interface/Driver-Kernel Interface (DDI/DKI) Reference Manual (2 copies)
AT&T 3B2/3B5/3B15 Computers Assembly Programming Manual
Sun Microsystems Inc (Sun Technical Reports)
The UNIX System - 1985
Sun 3 Architecture - 1986
I’m willing to split postage on mailing them wherever. If you are local (San Diego)
I’m willing to meet you wherever for an exchange and a coffee.
David
(Also posted on the cctalk mailing list)
I am surprised to not find any scans of early (pre-1980) Seventh Edition
Unix Programmer's Manual. Does anyone have any? (We do have the source
files and I see volume 2 manual scanned from later years.)
Also where is a copy the new license introduced with v7? I have copy of
1973 and 1974. Anyone have a scanned later version?
from etc/rc:
echo "Restricted rights: Use, duplication, or disclosure
is subject to restrictions stated in your contract with
Western Electric Company, Inc." >/dev/console
Thanks,
Jeremy C. Reed
echo Ohl zl obbx uggc://errqzrqvn.arg/obbxf/csfrafr/ | \
tr "Onoqrsuvxzabcefghl" "Babdefhikmnoprstuy"
> From: Lars Brinkhoff
> There was no 635 at Project MAC, was there?
I seem to recall reading about one. And in:
https://multicians.org/chrono.html
there's this entry: "08/65 GE 635 delivered to Project MAC". Clicking on the
'GE 635' link leads to "MIT's GE-635 system was installed on the ninth floor
of 545 Tech Square in 1965, and used to support a simulated 645 until the real
hardware was delivered."
Noel
The Dallas Ft. Worth UNIX Users Group
will be highlighting the 50th anniversary on October 10,
November 14, and maybe in December.
http://www.dfwuug.org/wiki/Main/Welcome
I will be presenting about the early history next week
and then about BSD-specific history in November.
Any of you in the DFW area? Any suggestions on anyone local to invite? I
am also looking for anyone local who can display old hardware or
materials at the event. I only have some old books and training
materials from 1980's.
Does anyone have scanned copies of early Lions commentary? (Not the 2000
printing, unless it looks identical, please let me know.)
I will try to share my slides to this list by end of this week. (I did
look at an early draft of Warner's slides, but didn't look at his final
slides nor watch his presentation yet. My presentation is from scratch
for now.)
Jeremy C. Reed
echo Ohl zl obbx uggc://errqzrqvn.arg/obbxf/csfrafr/ | \
tr "Onoqrsuvxzabcefghl" "Babdefhikmnoprstuy"
> Was patent department that first used Unix on PDP-11 and roff (~1971)
> same department that would later handle Unix licensing two years later?
> (~1973)
No. The former was the BTL legal and patent department. The latter was
at AT&T (or perhaps Western Electric).
Doug