Date: Wed, 15 May 1996 08:46:52 +0200 (MET DST) From: grog@lemis.de (Greg Lehey) To: edd@aic.net Cc: chat@FreeBSD.ORG (FreeBSD Chat) Subject: Re: UNIX System Message-ID: <199605150646.IAA06695@allegro.lemis.de> In-Reply-To: <199605130942.NAA09869@aic.net> from "edd@aic.net" at May 13, 96 01:42:16 pm
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edd@aic.net writes: > >>>> still wondering, however, whether it may not be called "Berkeley >>>> UNIX". > > I think there are no such thing as "Berkeley UNIX". If you refer to > BSD, you have to write BSD (and indicate release), > not UNIX. Because "UNIX" originally referred > to System V, again, IMHO. There are at least two points here: 1. My question wasn't "is there any such thing as Berkeley UNIX", but whether it could be used as a trademark independently of UNIX. 2. Berkeley UNIX (which, as other correspondents have observed, does have a precedent) predates System V by quite some time. According to the original daemon book, System V was first announced/released in 1983. 1BSD was released in 1977. Greg
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