As I fuzzily recall, I put together the original Berkeley Font Catalog
from various sources (such as Stanford's more complete catalog) to show
what we had available on the 36" Versatec at Berkeley. Looking at what's
in 4.1BSD vol 2C, I suspect somebody polished it up.
Most of my effort went into fed, a font editor that worked on Berkeley's
flakey HP 2648 graphics terminal, and editing the Hershey fonts, which
were seriously mangled, into a semi-presentable typeface. I could only
dream of having Times Roman available.
Thanks,
/Mary Ann Horton/ (she/her/ma'am)
maryannhorton.com <https://maryannhorton.com>
“This is a great book about an amazing journey of a woman
who went through hell to become the person she is today.”
* - Monica Helms, creator of the transgender flag*
"Brave and Important - Don’t miss this wonderful book!"
* - Laura L. Engel, Intl. Memoir Writers Assn.*
Available on Amazon and
bn.com. Audiobook on Google Play.
<https://www.amazon.com/Trailblazer-Lighting-Transgender-Equality-Corporate-ebook/dp/B0B8F2BR9B>
On 5/14/23 12:11, Clem Cole wrote:
On Sun, May 14, 2023 at 2:17 PM segaloco via TUHS <tuhs(a)tuhs.org> wrote:
Hello, I've just today secured purchase of an original 4BSD manual
and papers set and a copy of what I believe is the V6 papers set
as well. Of note amongst the tabs I could read from the pictures
of the Berkeley binder was a section of fonts that I don't think
I've seen before named the Berkeley Font Catalog. I did a bit of
searching around and didn't find anything matching that on first
inspection re: scanned and source-available BSD doc collections.
Anyone got the scoop on this?
Sure
The Berkeley Font Catalog was a collection of 200 bpi fonts that could
be used with vcat - the virtual CAT/4 typesetter and old tools like
some of the original EE cad editors like Ken Keller's and another from
Tom Ferrin at UCSF. The bulk of them was a copy of the Hershey Fonts
[
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hershey_fonts] and a number of fonts
specialty fonts, such as a set for typing chess, that had been
developed originally for the XGP at CMU, MIT, and Stanford. Between
the 3 ARPAnet sites, there was a lot of mixing and matching. Note: I
should have a Xerox copy of them from one of the UCB docs in my files.
They are on a BSD tape, I would look in the contributed area, but I
don't remember. There is likely troff input to print the catalog
(using vcat), but again I am trying to remember where any of that was
in the distribution kits.
FWIW: a few months back, Rob has corrected the history that the
original vcat(1) was Canadian in origin. I thought that Ferrin had
his hand in an early version that came to UCB (This is likely an
example of the side comment sometimes used, that joy peed on it to
make things smell like UCB, as Tom was across the bay). I also
thought Tom had collected much of the catalog originally; and while I
could be smoking something here -- I seem to remember that he also had
some sort of Stanford connection with some of his graphics work [the
UCSF and Stanford medical schools - were doing 3D graphics for medical
diags at some point]. Tom was a graphics guy, and I know he was mixed
up in some of that so it would have made sense for him to be somehow
involved. It was not for a few years later, when Barskey showed up at
UCB that there was any serious graphics work being done -- before
that, only ECAD tools like's Ken and later Oster's.
Clem
ᐧ