From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: neozeed@gmail.com (Jason Stevens) Date: Fri, 5 Jun 2009 14:40:00 -0400 Subject: [TUHS] UNIX turns forty In-Reply-To: <200906050348.n553mr9N017809@cuzuco.com> References: <200906050348.n553mr9N017809@cuzuco.com> Message-ID: <46b366130906051140m35e27e17i4f124fb74be3d0f7@mail.gmail.com> On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 11:48 PM, Brian S Walden wrote: > http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9133570 > I've just posted my $0.02 on the whole thing, but to recap I think it's lame the author didn't try to track down any actual digital artifacts of the era. I've tried to make the Unix v1 resurrection project more 'accessible' to the 'masses' (albeit windows masses).. But I guess it's just not glitzy enough.. Or they just don't realize that it even exists. I guess what it is coming down to, if you want it done 'right' you're going to have to do it yourself. And I guess that would be to make something detailed to categorized the evolutionary steps of Unix from all the versions that are in the TUHS/PUPS archive. And if the multiuser facilities exist, to make as may different versions (free/unencumbered or even 'commercial?') available online for people to kick the tires... I don't know I may be just dreaming in the sense I figure I'd probably end up with something just as empty, but would people be willing to put forth some kind of wiki of antidotes of their usage of various Unix on platforms? Maybe I'm just babbling so if it sounding too grandiose feel free to say I'm delusional. But in some way it’d be cool to have a “Unix museum” online that could walk you thru the various versions, show off the features of each, and allow the person to actually logon to a system.. That being said, is there a way to “cap” the amount of CPU that SIMH uses? Like a good old fashioned throttle?