Re: UNIX vs Unix (was: Time for Linux)

2009-02-03 Thread Jon 'maddog' Hall
I remember when "Unix" (instead of "UNIX") first started appearing. It was when the popular press started writing about it. I was working for DEC and there was a flurry that lasted for about two or three months while our legal department kept trying to get the press to do all CAPS in the press re

Re: UNIX vs Unix (was: Time for Linux)

2009-02-03 Thread Bill McGonigle
Great story, but illustrative of the problem: On 02/01/2009 04:11 PM, Jon 'maddog' Hall wrote: > Whether or not Dennis wanted to change it, "UNIX(R)" as registered by > the Open Group, holder of the standard, the brand and the trademark, is > "UNIX" (all "big caps"). Which is why most folks avoid

Re: UNIX vs Unix (was: Time for Linux)

2009-02-01 Thread Jon 'maddog' Hall
>we were intoxicated by being able to produce small caps. I think someone was intoxicated"small caps"hmmm. Well, since Ben rose to the bait. Whether or not Dennis wanted to change it, "UNIX(R)" as registered by the Open Group, holder of the standard, the brand and the trademark, is "

Re: UNIX vs Unix (was: Time for Linux)

2009-02-01 Thread Bill Ricker
On Sun, Feb 1, 2009 at 12:29 PM, Ben Scott wrote: > Later, dmr tried to get the > spelling changed to 'Unix' in a couple of Bell Labs papers, on the > grounds that the word is not acronymic. He failed, which likely would be due to Bell Trademark lawyers - you have to use it only the way you tr

UNIX vs Unix (was: Time for Linux)

2009-02-01 Thread Ben Scott
On Sun, Feb 1, 2009 at 8:15 AM, Jon 'maddog' Hall wrote: > ... note that I spelled UNIX in all capital letters, as it should be ... Oh, boy. Time for a lame name flame game! :) "Dennis Ritchie says that the 'UNIX' spelling originally happened in CACM's 1974 paper _The UNIX Time-Sharing Sys