On 7 Apr 2017, at 00:09, Warren Toomey <wkt(a)tuhs.org> wrote:
That's a good point Josh. I've been trying to find copies of UKUUG and
EUUG newsletters to add to the archive, along with the AUUG newsletters.
We certainly have some EUUG / UKUUG stuff, on paper though, and I'm not sure where
they are and it is probably very partial.
While going through papers recently we found what was I am reasonably sure the quote for
the first Sun sold in Scotland which might be of some interest (inevitably I now
don't know where it is, although we did not throw it away). We're not sure
whether it is for that machine, but we are sure that my wife (who isn't on the list)
ran it (a 2/120 we think). It started out with SunOS 1 (or perhaps before).
Unfortunately we have thrown a lot of stuff away as we just didn't have room,
including lots of SunOS & other distributions.
We both have the usual anecdotes about doing what seems now like unreasonably heroic
things to fix broken systems: nothing that almost everyone who ran machines in the 1980s
did not do, I think.
It's strange to think that when we first seriously encountered Unix it was about 14
or 15, while now it is 47: we've used Unix for the great majority of its life while
not in any way feeling like 'old unix people': the systems we started with had
huge address spaces, virtual memory and IP stacks and almost had things like NFS, and were
just clearly almost unrecognisably advanced over what had existed in the early history
which seemed so long ago but actually was not.
--tim