JonSteinhart said:

> just write whatever you want and wait for Clem to correct you and fill in the details

Thanks for giving away my deepest secret for being a contributor to Open Source projects.  The trick is, you write _something_ that does what you need, no matter how horrid, and put it out there, and wait for the screams to roll in and then someone who knows what they're doing to implement it correctly.

Works almost every time.

Adam

On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 7:19 PM Jon Steinhart <jon@fourwinds.com> wrote:
On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 7:31 PM <reed@reedmedia.net> wrote:

> There needs to be a book with stuff like this. There is no Unix history
> book that I have ever seen with the depth of information in threads like
> this and others on TUHS.  It would be a huge project and hard to tell if
> there would me more than just recognition and intrinsic rewards for the
> effort -- but maybe that is enough.

So having just finished a book project and therefore having a bit of a clue
as to what it would take, I'd be willing to take a stab at coordinating a
project like this.  But it's not clear to me what the audience should be.
Many of the folks on this list are obsessive with details that matter to,
well, only people on this list.  To make a good book I think that it would
have to trace the major paths, innovations, and people.  In any case, this
would be easy - just write whatever you want and wait for Clem to correct
you and fill in the details :-)

Jon