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|  Message 978  |
|  Richard Falken to Dan Cross  |
|  Re: what's classic now?  |
|  09 Jul 21 07:08:53  |
 TZUTC: -0500 MSGID: 474.fido_classicc@1:123/115 254d742f REPLY: 3:770/100 24a08ba2 PID: Synchronet 3.19a-Linux master/48598fc02 Jun 13 2021 GCC 5.5.0 TID: SBBSecho 3.14-Linux master/48598fc02 Jun 13 2021 GCC 5.5.0 COLS: 100 BBSID: PALANT CHRS: ASCII 1 NOTE: Synchronet msgeditor master/48598fc02 Re: Re: what's classic now? By: Dan Cross to Richard Falken on Fri Jul 02 2021 01:41 pm > On 01 Jul 2021 at 06:13p, Richard Falken pondered and said... > > RF> Re: Re: what's classic now? > RF> By: Dan Cross to Richard Falken on Fri Jul 02 2021 03:01 am > RF> > That doesn't sound right to me. Rogue began life on a VAX > RF> > running BSD Unix, not 6th Edition. Adventure almost certainly > RF> > made an appearance on the PDP-11 pretty early on, perhaps in > RF> > the Research days, but rogue would have come later; after all, > RF> > it uses curses. > > RF> I sourced that information from the Early Roguelike Gallery. John Elwin > RF> is trying very hard to keep a living museum of early rogue(likes) so if you have a valid > RF> source for that claim, he will LOVE to hear about it > RF> and make the necessary corrections. > > Well, the original authors were Glenn Wichman and Michael Toy, > with some input from Ken Arnold. Arnold wrote the curses > library that they built Rogue on top of at Berkeley. Rogue is > from 1980, 6th Edition Unix was '74 (tapes went out in '75), > 7th Ed was '78 (tapes distributed outside of Bell Labs in '79), > and 32V (Unix ported to run on the VAX) later in '79. Joy > and Baboglu did virtual memory support in 3.0 BSD (before > TCP/IP!) towards the end of '79. Ken Arnold wrote curses while > at Berkeley, where he was a student from '79 to '83. The > earliest reference to curses that I can find is from 2.79BSD, > which is April 1980, though there are claims that there was > a paper written in 1977; I'm not sure I buy that, though, as I > can't find a good source for that time frame. In the original > curses paper from 2.79, Arnold gives credit to Bill Joy for > what is obviously termcap, which was done for `vi`. So I > think it's safe to assume that the work that went into curses > was probably done ~1979. > > 2.79 also includes a document from Michael Toy describing > rogue; Glenn Wichman has a history document describing the > history of `rogue` here: http://www.digital-eel.com/deep/A_Br ef_History_of_Rogue.htm > Note the references to starting with curses; so whenever > Rogue was written, it post-dates curses, and a lot of > contemporary accounts put it in 1980: 6th Ed was long in > the tooth by then. > > I found a site called "rlgallery.org" which is a "Roguelike > Gallery" and has some history notes that claim development > in 1981 through 1983, but with no citations save some really > sketchy link to a gamesutra article. I can't find any references > to 6th Edition beyond the rlgallery.org notes, but that doesn't > make a lot of sense to me, as I said before: if that early > work were done on a PDP-11, I imagine it would have been running > 2BSD (any college in the UC system could have gotten the tape). > > So yeah. I'm not buying that it was originally written for 6th > Ed. That just doesn't make a lot of sense. I forwarded this message to ElwinR. He says he has evidence from the RRP that Rogue V3 was developped on a PDP-11, and that it was Rogue V4 what was done on 4BSD on a VAX. He also agrees he lacks reliable citations for claiming Unix V6 was the first platform on which Rogue was developped so he is going to make some corrections on his site. Cheers! -- gopher://gopher.richardfalken.com/1/richardfalken --- SBBSecho 3.14-Linux * Origin: Palantir * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL * (1:123/115) SEEN-BY: 1/120 123 14/0 18/0 200 90/1 105/81 116/116 120/340 457 616 SEEN-BY: 123/0 10 25 35 40 115 126 131 150 170 180 190 200 257 755 SEEN-BY: 129/305 135/300 153/7715 154/10 50 220/80 90 226/18 30 227/114 SEEN-BY: 227/702 229/101 424 426 428 452 700 981 1016 1017 240/5832 SEEN-BY: 249/1 206 317 400 261/38 282/1038 292/854 299/6 300/4 301/1 SEEN-BY: 317/3 322/757 342/200 633/280 2320/105 3634/0 12 15 24 27 SEEN-BY: 3634/50 119 PATH: 123/115 3634/12 154/10 229/426 |
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