From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: wkt@tuhs.org (Warren Toomey) Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 19:42:30 +1000 Subject: [Unix-jun72] if you're looking for a different way to volunteer... In-Reply-To: <20080510032127.63E2C5A522@remarque.org> References: <20080510032127.63E2C5A522@remarque.org> Message-ID: <20080511094230.GC7947@minnie.tuhs.org> 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