On Fri, May 09, 2008 at 08:21:27PM -0700, Doug Merritt wrote:
if you want to contribute, but don't have e.g.
arcane knowledge of
PDP 11 assembly and such -- then let me suggest that it would be
interesting to find out more about these people listed in the 1973
"Study of Unix" documents (
http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/bellLabs/unix/)
that formed the basis of this reconstruction effort.
Good idea.
For starters, who was this "T. R. Bashkow" who called the
meeting? Some googling last week indicates to me that he has
an engineering award named after him, and that he does
not have a wikipedia entry.
Ted Bashkow. That's all I've found too. We should ask Dennis.
B. A. Tague's name is prominent too, although I
personally
do not recognize it. And similarly for the other memo
addressees.
Berkeley Tague: I think one of the managers at Bell Labs. I should know
more, but a Google find this quickly:
http://www.ais.org/~jrh/acn/text/ACN6-1.txt, and there's more out there.
Consider that any of these people might just happen to
still
have source code listings, magnetic/DEC-tapes, paper tape, or even just
historical anecdotes to share, but perhaps no one ever asked
them.
I've asked as many as I could find. An early AUUG or Usenix newsletter
mentioned that Jim McKie has won a 2nd Edition DECtape at a conference
"trivia night": I e-mailed him, and to cut a long story short, it is
probably the s1/s2 tapes that Dennis found. Kirk McKusick and Keith Bostic
found a DEC tape reader, connected it up to a VAX, and read the s1/s2 tapes
for Dennis.
Cheers,
Warren