Peter Salus has died

167 points by speckx 18 hours ago on hackernews | 14 comments

Buildstarted | 18 hours ago

Abh1Works | 18 hours ago

RIP a goat

oldspleen | 18 hours ago

During college, his Unix history book was the first one I read that actually made the AT&T => BSD => linux throughline make sense. RIP.

TZubiri | 18 hours ago

Quarter century of UNIX sounds interesting.

I found at least 1 copy in the Internet Archive.

https://archive.org/details/aquartercenturyofunixpeterh.salu...

The cover looks redacted, as the "Sex, Drugs" from "Sex, Drugs, Unix" was removed. Hopefully the content wasn't censored as well.

massimosgrelli | 6 hours ago

Thanks for sharing this link. I'll read it right away. If you are passionate about Unix history, you should also get Unix: A History and a Memoir by Brian Kernighan https://www.amazon.com/UNIX-History-Memoir-Brian-Kernighan/d...

Projectiboga | 3 hours ago

anna's archive has it in a 20MB Pdf. you can find a link for that archive on the Wikipedia for the Anna's archive.

armada1122 | 17 hours ago

His name shows up everywhere in the Unix bibliography but I'll be honest — I've used A Quarter Century of Unix mostly as a lookup for specific stories rather than reading it cover-to-cover. For folks who read it as it came out: where would you point someone today who wants the full sweep? It's hard to tell from outside which of his books hold up as essential vs. which show their age.

Tangent, but: is anyone doing comparable oral-history work for the current LLM moment? It feels like a lot of it is going to survive only as scattered blog posts and conference talks, and I don't know who's playing the role Salus did for Unix.

YesThatTom2 | 17 hours ago

He was also executive director of both the USENIX Association in its very early years.

farwaabbas | 17 hours ago

RIP a legend. Thanks for preserving Unix history.

krylon | 17 hours ago

Rest in peace, Mister Salus.
RIP. I've actually found the Handbook of Programming Languages (4 volumes) that he edited much more useful than his Unix history.

I met him in a few conferences, back in the day. We ended up talking more about linguistics than Unix history, somehow.

Tepix | 13 hours ago

We should honor these people when they turn 80, then they get to see all the love and respect themselves!

Tade0 | 11 hours ago

Let's make it 70 - otherwise even if the tradition started 15 years ago, Dennis Ritchie wouldn't be included.

angry_octet | 11 hours ago