On Wed, 18 Nov 2020, Clem Cole wrote: > In our exchange, someone observed suggested that Joy might have picked > it up because the HOME key was part of the tilde key on the ADM3A, which > were popular at UCB [i.e. the reason hjkl are the movement keys on vi is > the were embossed on the top of those keys on the ADM3A].  It also was > noted that the ASR-33 lacks a ~ key on its keyboard.  But Lesk > definitely needed something to represent a remote user's home directory > because each system was different, so he was forced to use something. The ADM-3A was one of the best terminals ever made. > It was also noted that there was plenty of cross-pollination going on as > students and researchers moved from site to site, so it could have been BTL > to UCB, vice-versa, or some other path altogether. > > So two questions for this august body are: > 1. Where did the ~ as $HOME convention come to UNIX? Gawd... I think I saw it in PWB, but I'm likely wrong. > 2. Did UNIX create the idiom, or was there an earlier system such as CTSS, > TENEX, ITS, MTS, TSS, or the like supported it? No idea. but given that Unix inherited a lot of stuff.... -- Dave