The magazine of the Melbourne PC User Group
UNIX or Unix, Web or web?
Major Keary |
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Unix
Not so long ago ordinary computer users rarely heard the name, Unix. Greatly
improved inter-platform operability, and the Internet, has changed that. Now we
are all used to hearing about Unix boxes, Linux servers, and so on.
A change is taking place in the way 'UNIX' is typeset; it is becoming commonly
printed as Unix. But first a little background on the name.
The need for a multi-user operating system with lots of processing power and
plenty of room for the storage of data led to a project being established in
1965 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and General Electric
(GEC). The new operating systems was to be called MULTICS, which stood for
Multiplexed Information and Computer Service. Bell Laboratories took an
interest, but withdrew in 1969 when it became apparent that the concept was
still in gestation, with every indication that the infant MULTICS may not be
born for quite a long time - if ever.
People at Bell who had worked on the MULTICS project began developing a file
system; it was undertaken for various reasons, one of which was to enable them
play a space-travel game! One thing led to another and in 1971 the first edition
of UNIX was published. Brian Kernighan had called it, Uniplexed Information and
Computing System(UNICS), by way of a humorous play on the name of the moribund
MULTICS. UNICS quickly became UNIX.
Kernighan is well-known as one of the authors of the standard reference on the C
language; the other, Desmond Ritchie, was the original designer of C and one of
the creators of Unix.
As a matter of interest, the first port of Unix was achieved at the University
of Wollongong in 1977, and in the same year some of the first documentation was
published by John Lions of the University of New South Wales. A fascinating
genealogical history of Unix is contained in Goodheart and Cox: The Magic Garden
Explained (1994). In a foreword John Mashey (who began working at Bell Labs in
1973 when Unix was still in its infancy and who later became part of Silicon
Graphics), writes: "There has long been a somewhat mysterious connection between
the UNIX system and the folks Down Under. For whatever reason there were often
Australian computer scientists around Bell Labs, or doing interesting things
with the UNIX system very far away. A bit later came John Lions' wonderful
booklets explaining the innards of ... [UNIX] ...".
Until recently Unix was generally rendered in upper case. The Unix form has been
in use for over five years: the authoritative Encyclopedia of Computer Science
uses 'Unix' in body text; it is also used in Wired Style (1996)-a style manual
for the editors of Wired), and in recent titles published by O'Reilly (whose
books are a benchmark of typographical excellence).
So, why the change? The original acronym, UNICS, was never meant to be taken
seriously, and its conversion to UNIX-regardless of origin-set it apart as a
name in its own right. There may be patents or copyrighted trade names that use
the full force of the majuscule form, but Unix has become a generic name for an
operating system that takes many forms and just as many trade names. The
all-caps spelling is no longer appropriate for general references to Unix and,
in my opinion, should be used in only those instances where a particular form is
called for by a proprietary name. Apart from that, Unix looks better and is
easier to type. [Ed: The PC Update style is still UNIX - GT]
Web or web?
A similar thing is happening in respect of the World Wide Web, which has been
contracted to the Web. A distinction is being drawn between what has become a
proper noun, Web (as in The Web) and the descriptive term, web, as in web site,
web browser, web pages, and so on.
I am in favour of the use of web when one is writing about web sites, web pages,
etc. Using the word - which it has become - with a capital W when writing about
a web site (or website, as seems to becoming common usage) is a bit pompous. As
early as 1994 the capital W was being dropped, even in the proper noun form.
[Ed: Our PC Update Style retains the capital "W" as follows: Web site, Web page,
the Web and so on. Spiders spin webs and there is no such word as website, we
correct it to Web site - ie. a site on the Web - GT]
That kind of change has also occurred in many Internet terms; for example, what
was originally written as Electronic Mail later became E-mail, then e-mail, and
is now more commonly rendered as email. I'm not sure how email gets on in
German, where all nouns are capitalised; my recollection is that Email is their
word for enamel, which could be a bit confusing. [Ed: the PC Update style is
e-mail, or E-mail where it's required to be capitalised as the first word of a
sentence - GT]
The Internet still retains its capital I, regardless of how it is used. Forms,
such as intranet and extranet are commonly rendered without a capital letter, so
who knows what might happen to Internet.
Reprinted from the December 2003 issue of PC Update, the magazine of Melbourne PC User Group, Australia
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