What do you mean by "early"? All of my early work was done under my login
"marc", and in those days to email we just typed:
% mail marc
Email was internal to the system. Email between machines came along later.
Also, I don't think we ever used the word "commit." Actually, much of my
early work predated the introduction of SCCS. ;-)
marc
On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 1:53 AM, Diomidis Spinellis <dds(a)aueb.gr> wrote:
The Unix History repository on GitHub [1] aims to
provide the evolution of
Unix from the 1970s until today under Git revision control. Through a few
changes recently made [2] it's now possible for individual contributors to
have their GitHub profile linked to their early Unix contributions. Ken
Thompson graciously made this move last week following a personal email
invitation. I think it would be really cool if more followed. This would
send a powerful message of continuity and tradition in computing to
youngsters joining GitHub today.
What you need to do is the following.
- Create a GitHub profile (if you haven't already got one)
- Click on
https://github.com/settings/emails
- Add the email address(es) associated with your early Unix commits (e.g.
foo(a)research.uucp or bar(a)ucbvax.berkeley.edu) You can easily find an
author's commits and email addresses recorded in the repository through the
web search form
http://www.spinellis.gr/cgi-bin/namegrep.pl
- GitHub will tell you that a verification email has been sent to your
(probably defunct) email address. Don't worry. Your account will be
linked to the address even without the verification step.
- Adding your photograph to your profile will increase the vividness of
GitHub's revision listings.
If you're in contact with Unix contributors who are not on this list,
please forward them this message. Also, if your name isn't properly
associated with the repository's commits, drop me an email message (or a
GitHub pull request for the corresponding file [3]), and I'll add it.
[1]
https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo
[2] The modifications involved the change of UUCP addresses to use the
.uucp pseudo-domain rather than a ! path and the listing of co-authors
within the commit message.
[3]
https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-make/tree/master/src/author-path
Diomidis -
http://www.spinellis.gr