Hello everyone, I've just recently secured an item that has drawn some questions to
mind. The item is a "UNIX System III Programmer's Manual Volume 2A" (image
from auction listing:
https://i.imgur.com/6blnqz3.jpeg)
The cover is of a typical 70's Bell System motif, branded Western Electric, with blue
and yellow lines and a Bell logo. The cover itself appears to be a typical report cover
with a window for the title page of the document.
First, I've only seen System III stuff still labeled "Release 3.0." Indeed
the manual I have says Release 3.0 on the title page. Also, said manual is Bell
Laboratories branded and has the blue and yellow lines near the top, above the cover text
but below the Bell Laboratories logotype, an arrangement that can be seen on plenty of
Bell Laboratories stuff even into the AT&T period (with the lines being replaced with
the blue, red, and black, and death star instead of bell.)
With this set, however, it is specifically labeled "System III". I've
heard, anecdotally, that there were User's Manuals that specifically had the text
"System III" on the title page, but I've never seen this myself. Are there
System III branded manuals or am I misremembering. Additionally, this is labeled
specifically Western Electric rather than Bell Labs. Western Electric would continue to
be the name on the cover of UNIX documentation (for the most part) after this until
divestiture. If such formal "System III" manuals exist, which branding did they
happen to get?
Another curious matter is the document is titled "Programmer's Manual...Volume
2A". This nomenclature is more commonly associated with research than stuff
descending more from the PWB line like the commercial lineage. For instance, even PWB 1.0
listed its two main documents as "User's Manual" and "Documents for
Use With". Research has always called the document the "Programmer's
Manual" as far as I know, and the "Documents for Use With" nomenclature was
only used with V6, V7 introduced treating the two sets as "Volumes" of the same
larger work. What's interesting is in the sources for System III on the archive, in
/usr/src/man/docs, the road_map (Documentation Roadmap) specifically uses the text
"User's Manual" and "Documents for UNIX", which is still the case
by 4.x (albeit the a_man/u_man split seems to have happened right about this time). In
any case, I would be curious if anyone knows what was going on with the naming of
documentation at this time. Would this imply that there is some variation on the
3.0/SysIII manual out there named "Programmer's Manual" instead of
"User's Manual", or perhaps that for some reason when the Sys III variants
of these docs had started being published, they had for some reason tried to cut over to
the V7 documentation structure only to back out back to "Documents for UNIX" and
a "User's Manual" as distinct things by the time of 4.0?
In any case, once this gets here, I'll look it over for anything compelling that
might set it apart from the document sources in the UNIX tree. I'm a bit bummed
it's only Volume 2A, not both, but it'll be nice to have a physical example of
the distributed, published documentation of the time. Maybe a 2B will pop up one of these
days.
Thanks for any insights or recollections!
- Matt G.
P.S. Long shot, very long shot, but if anyone on this mailing list has any empty, unused
Bell System report covers of the era, Bell Laboratories especially, I would happily buy
them from you. I've got my V6 documents and some BSD stuff just in random report
covers I fished out of the university recycling, they'd look much nicer in proper
covers, but I also recognize the bulk of those covers probably also wound up in some
recycling/waste stream decades ago and no longer exist. Once I get this I could use the
cover to produce a reasonable facsimile but I feel a tad uneasy regarding "breaking
the seal" on that prospect, I don't want to cross the line from improving the
aesthetics of my bookshelf to counterfeiting something.