From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: jnc@mercury.lcs.mit.edu (Noel Chiappa) Date: Mon, 19 Dec 2016 15:10:31 -0500 (EST) Subject: [TUHS] Dennis' Draft of the Unix Timesharing System: not so draft? Message-ID: <20161219201031.3259D18C0A1@mercury.lcs.mit.edu> > From: Warren Toomey > Ritchie, D.M. The UNIX Time Sharing System. MM 71-1273-4. > which makes me think that the draft version Doug McIlroy found Not really a response to your question, but I'd looked at that 'UnixEditionZero' and was very taken with this line, early on: "the most important features of UNIX are its simplicity [and] elegance" and had been meaning for some time to send in a rant. The variants of Unix done later by others sure fixed that, didn't they? :-( On a related note, great as my respect is for Ken and Doug for their work on early Unix (surely the system with the greatest bang/buck ratio ever), I have to disagree with them about Multics. In particular, if one is going to have a system as complex as modern Unices have become, one might as well get the power of Multics for it. Alas, we have the worst of both worlds - the size, _without_ the power. (Of course, Multics made some mistakes - primarly in thinking that the future of computing lay in large, powerful central machines, but other aspects of the system - such as the single-level store - clearly were the right direction. And wouldn't it be nice to have AIM boxes to run our browers and mail-readers in - so much for malware!) Noel