From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: jsteve@superglobalmegacorp.com (Jason Stevens) Date: Mon, 20 Feb 2017 15:19:29 +0800 Subject: [TUHS] Reorganising the Unix Archive? (GNU?) In-Reply-To: <86d1ed49ry.fsf@molnjunk.nocrew.org> References: <4FBE38B7-39C6-4391-9E0B-D5E72C77EC84@superglobalmegacorp.com> <86d1ed49ry.fsf@molnjunk.nocrew.org> Message-ID: <368ECC0A-A5F6-4B21-B226-26C3FEFA7D81@superglobalmegacorp.com> Cool, hopefully one has the cuckoo's root bug! On February 20, 2017 3:10:57 PM GMT+08:00, Lars Brinkhoff wrote: >Jason Stevens writes: >> I dont know if it's worth even trying to find and mirror pre 1993 ( >IE >> when cheap CD-ROM mastering was possible) GNU software? >> >> Things like binutils, gas, and GCC can be tremendously useful, along >> with binaries for long "dead" platforms? > >I have collected old version of GNU Emacs. 19.x is well covered. 18.x >less so. Noah Friedman had 16.56, and I found two releases of Emacs 17 >and one I believe to be version 13! > >Other historical Unix Emacsen: MicroEMACS 30 from Dave Conroy, Gosling >Emacs, Warren Montgomery/BTL/ATT/unixpc Emacs, EMACS-11 by Fred Fish. > >Get these from https://github.com/larsbrinkhoff/emacs-history -- Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: