From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: arnold@skeeve.com (arnold@skeeve.com) Date: Thu, 24 Sep 2015 07:27:18 -0600 Subject: [TUHS] Questions regarding early Unix contributors In-Reply-To: <5603C1E7.3090200@aueb.gr> References: <5603C1E7.3090200@aueb.gr> Message-ID: <201509241327.t8ODRJOB014654@freefriends.org> I've asked BWK to shed some light. > - Lorinda Cherry is credited with diction. But diction.c first appears > in 4BSD and 2.10BSD. Did Lorinda Cherry implement it at Berkeley? She was at Bell Labs; I think the Berkeley guys had an underground pipeline to Bell labs and some stuff got out that way. :-) (Mary Ann? Care to shed some light?) > BSD: > Chris Van Wyk Chris Van Wyk definitely was at Bell Labs at some point. He did Ideal, a preprocessor similar to pic and also wrote an algorithms with C book. I don't think he was ever at UCB but I don't know. > Mark Rochkind Here too I think stuff written at ATT got out through Berkeley. (SCCS) > Peter Honeyman I don't think he was ever at UCB; he was at Bell Labs for a short time (cf HoneyDanBer UUCP and the V8 /mail file system). > Tom Duff I believe he was 'td'; I also don't think he was at UCB. He pingponged a bit between Bell Labs and LucasFilm, I think. Cf the Plan 9 'rc' shell and the infamous "Duff's Device". > Ted Dolotta > T. J. Kowalski Also, methinks, a case of UCB releasing stuff written by ATT. Feel free to take all this with a grain of salt. I was around USENET in those days, but didn't know any of these people personally; I just read their documents and USENET postings. HTH, Arnold