schoen 8 hours ago

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.

liendolucas 3 hours ago

I would happily pay for a high quality print, but no idea where to get one from.

badc0ffee 7 hours ago

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).

  • jibal an hour ago

    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.

psychoslave 9 hours ago

#28, pwd, looks like a play on words with "powder" that you would put in a box.

grandiego 9 hours ago

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.)

  • nine_k 8 hours ago

    To me, the stuff that grows from a shell invocation must be a process tree.

    • tempodox 5 hours ago

      Quite. I felt reminded of Git but it did not exist yet in the 1980s.