The Richard Stevens books were huge here. I did not know him well but emailed with him a few times in the year before he died. I never met him in person but he was very kind to a much younger and more ignorant me. On Sun, Mar 7, 2021 at 7:21 PM wojciech@koszek.com wrote: > Hello everyone, > > I'm Wojciech Adam Koszek and I'm a new member here. After a short stint > with Red Hat 6.0 and Slackware Linux around 2000-2001 (I think it was > Slackware 7.0 or 7.1) my journey with UNIX started with FreeBSD 4.5. I fell > in love with BSD and through Warner Losh, Robert Watson, and folks from a > Polish UNIX scene, I became hooked. I ended up working with FreeBSD for the > following 15 years or so. > > Anyway: the volume of the UNIX literature back then in Poland was scarce, > yet through a small bookstore and a friendly salesman I got myself a "UNIX > Network Programming Volume 1" at a huge discount, and read it back-to-back. > > Looking back, his books had a huge impact on my life (I had all his books, > and read everything line by line, with a slight exception of TCP/IP > illustrated vol 2, which I used as a reference), and while Stevens's > website sheds some light on what he did, I often wonder what is the story > behind how his books came to be. It doesn't help he appeared a very private > person--never have I seen a photo of him anywhere. > > What was the reception of his books in the US? > > Did you know him? Do you know any more details about what he did after > 1990? > > Thanks and take care, > > Wojciech Adam Koszek