On Wed, Dec 9, 2015 at 5:47 PM, John Cowan <cowan@mercury.ccil.org> wrote:
I thought "ld" stood for Link eDitor.  :-)
​I have never heard that justification.   It's always been talked about as the "loader" communications I had with different folks including Dennis.  In the early/mid '70s the person that introduced me to Unix (tjk) always called it the loader.​   Ted was (like many of us in those days) coming from either IBM's TSS or MTS, and influenced by IBM's terminology as well as DECs.

 
On OS/8 there
​ ​
were four linkers, one for each compiler:  ABSLDR, LOAD, LOADER,
and LINK.  LINK was for the macro assembler, the last one published.
​I used TSS/8 and I've forgotten what is was called there, never used OS/8.  In TOPS and Tenex land it was called a linker, as it was on TSS and MTS.


 
I don't remember the story on the various PDP-11 DEC OSes;
​RT-11, DOS-11 and RSX all called it a linker.​


 
by VMS days
​ ​
it was exclusively LINK. 
​As the author of VMS's link and later versions, I'll try to ask Paul tomorrow what he knows/remembers.  In my presence, he has b*tched about Unix calling it a 'loader.​
 
​'

Clem