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    213 points kaycebasques | 35 comments | | HN request time: 1.244s | source | bottom
    1. grandiego ◴[] No.43590284[source]
    The #38 is controversial as noted. To me it represents the branching of Unix flavors, mostly derived from the AT&T and BSD versions (represented by the glasses.)
    replies(2): >>43590737 #>>43593343 #
    2. psychoslave ◴[] No.43590403[source]
    #28, pwd, looks like a play on words with "powder" that you would put in a box.
    3. schoen ◴[] No.43590725[source]
    I think the spool with usr written on it most likely refers to the /usr/spool directory, where user mailboxes (and I think print jobs) were traditionally kept.
    4. nine_k ◴[] No.43590737[source]
    To me, the stuff that grows from a shell invocation must be a process tree.
    replies(1): >>43591704 #
    5. badc0ffee ◴[] No.43590996[source]
    Somehow I had never heard of/seen this before. It looks like a prog rock album cover or something.

    Some old commands in there I haven't used in a long time (poke, uucp), or never used - I think the troff I know is actually the one in GWBASIC (tracing off).

    replies(2): >>43592530 #>>43592805 #
    6. ◴[] No.43591100[source]
    7. tempodox ◴[] No.43591704{3}[source]
    Quite. I felt reminded of Git but it did not exist yet in the 1980s.
    8. dmazin ◴[] No.43591707[source]
    This is amazing. Does anyone know how to get a physical copy?
    replies(3): >>43591822 #>>43592154 #>>43594432 #
    9. darnir ◴[] No.43591822[source]
    One of the previous times this was posted, someone offered to print and ship them. I got a A2 sized canvas print. It hangs in my home office now.
    10. liendolucas ◴[] No.43592047[source]
    I would happily pay for a high quality print, but no idea where to get one from.
    replies(3): >>43592659 #>>43594121 #>>43594416 #
    11. probably_wrong ◴[] No.43592154[source]
    The Internet Archive offers a 32Mb PNG file. Download that one and take it to your local print shop.

    https://archive.org/details/unix-magic-poster-gary-overcare-...

    replies(2): >>43594157 #>>43605056 #
    12. jibal ◴[] No.43592530[source]
    Much of the acceptance of UNIX at Bell Labs was due to its role as a typesetting system, with troff, eqn, and tbl commands. I worked for a UNIX support company (Interactive Systems Corporation) and our first customer was the U.S. Supreme Court because they deal with so many documents.
    replies(1): >>43593429 #
    13. ◴[] No.43592659[source]
    14. DonHopkins ◴[] No.43592805[source]
    The TRS-80 has TROFF and TRON!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQoL_qpYbW0

    More useful but not quite as magical as DECSYSTEM 10 and DECSYSTEM 20 BASIC's "LISTREVERSE" command!

    https://web.archive.org/web/20210713130832/https://imgur.com...

    Chalk one up for DEC and BASIC. What other programming languages support that feature, huh?

    Now all you need is a COMEFROM and COMESUB and RUNREVERSE (or NUR) statements, and you can write reversible BASIC programs!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reversible_computing

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counter-Clock_World

        DECSYSTEM 20 BASIC User's Guide: LISTREVERSE command
    
        LISTREVERSE
        LISTNHREVERSE
    
        LISTREVERSE and LISTNHREVERSE print the contents of the
        user's memory area in order of descending line numbers. 
        LISTREVERSE precedes the output with a heading,
        LISTNHREVERSE eliminates the heading.
    
        LISTREVERSE
    
        EQUIV             10:53                      13-NOV-75
    
        40    END
        35    PRINT "THE EQUIVALENT CURRENT IS",I, " AMPERES"
        25    I=E1/R
        10    INPUT R
        5     INPUT E1
    
        READY
    
    http://bitsavers.org/www.computer.museum.uq.edu.au/pdf/DEC-1...

    http://bitsavers.org/www.computer.museum.uq.edu.au/pdf/DEC-2...

    Emacs should have an edit-reverse-mode!

    replies(1): >>43596957 #
    15. ape4 ◴[] No.43593221[source]
    How about annotating the word "magic"? Of course there's /etc/magic that's used by the `file` command. By the way it identifies itself, doing `file /etc/magic` works.
    16. k3vinw ◴[] No.43593343[source]
    Interesting. When I look at this I see printed circuitry like you would find on a PCB. In which case it could represent the electrons flowing downwards into the processor which powers the shell. And the power source might be the wizard himself or his beard.
    replies(1): >>43594222 #
    17. PopAlongKid ◴[] No.43593429{3}[source]
    When I first started using Unix in school in the early 1980s, at least a third of the time was using nroff/troff, tbl and eqn. Maybe another 20% playing rogue. The rest was used to become a vi/ex advanced user, writing csh and awk scripts, and learning C.

    The article mentions the "t" in troff, but doesn't mention that "roff" was short for "run off". I forget what the "n" was for.

    replies(1): >>43593884 #
    18. abetusk ◴[] No.43593884{4}[source]
    "New" roff [0].

    [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nroff

    19. aktuel ◴[] No.43594121[source]
    If you open the image in a new tab you see that the resolution is good enough to order a print online from one of the countless print services.
    replies(1): >>43594204 #
    20. dmazin ◴[] No.43594157{3}[source]
    Good idea, thanks!
    21. righthand ◴[] No.43594204{3}[source]
    Or ask your local print shop to make a print.
    22. righthand ◴[] No.43594222{3}[source]
    The power source is the fire underneath the shell.
    replies(1): >>43596436 #
    23. ozbonus ◴[] No.43594319[source]
    There are two more paintings in this series: Unix Views and Unix Feuds. High quality scans of all three are available on the internet archive.
    replies(1): >>43595772 #
    24. jiveturkey ◴[] No.43594416[source]
    https://jpmens.net/2021/04/09/the-unix-magic-poster/
    replies(1): >>43596164 #
    25. jiveturkey ◴[] No.43594432[source]
    https://jpmens.net/2021/04/09/the-unix-magic-poster/
    26. thinkingemote ◴[] No.43594470[source]
    #39 skull (dev/null) or daemon

    To me it looks like monkey face or like a cats face, a lynx? There is a tap / spigot above but I don't think tap wasn't much of a unix thing back then?

    edits:

    https://github.com/drio/unixmagic/issues/13

    > the top of head has an old time faucet handle and this might be referencing IO redirection (streams) as well as the stream of molten lava/magic brew.

    27. yazantapuz ◴[] No.43595337[source]
    When i see the brick wall i think of the -Wall option in gcc.
    replies(1): >>43595506 #
    28. schoen ◴[] No.43595506[source]
    Hmmm, it could also be the wall(1) program, which was already a part of AT&T Unix!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wall_(Unix)

    29. dfc ◴[] No.43595772[source]
    https://archive.org/details/unix-magic
    30. liendolucas ◴[] No.43596164{3}[source]
    Awesome, that looks like what I want. Thanks for sharing!
    replies(1): >>43598820 #
    31. k3vinw ◴[] No.43596436{4}[source]
    Ahh. Good point! Perhaps a better analogy would be that the brain processing power is represented by the circuitry. I’d be curious to other interpretations for why it appears where it does.
    32. Gibbon1 ◴[] No.43596957{3}[source]
    I liked Rocky Mountain BASIC with it's nice string operations and first class matrix operations.

    I think it had a sort function too. But can't remember.

    33. daleswanson ◴[] No.43598820{4}[source]
    I literally just had this printed, following that same blog post. Would recommend Whitewalls, it was a very high quality print. I got the 12x18 size, kind of regret not getting it bigger, but I didn't have the wall space.
    34. zelse ◴[] No.43605056{3}[source]
    They also have absurdly huge TIFFs of all 3 posters if folks are interested: https://archive.org/search?query=creator%3A%22Gary+Overacre%...