Today I visited a local University where an employee, a friend of
mine, was having his retirement sendoff. While I was there, I had a
look in their Library.
I can remember, years ago, the Library building had four levels, each
full of books. Now, the building is twice the size, by adding the
equivalent of a second buildingrCOs worth of floor space beside the
existing one, so it still has four levels, each with double the area.
But all the books (that would have been part of the old collection)
now fit on just one level. There is a new specialist rCLLaw LibraryrCY on >another level, but the rest is filled with computer terminals, meeting
spaces etc.
So four (old-size) floorsrCO worth of books is now down to just two.
I had a look at the computing section. I found books dating back ten
years or more. Apart from historical interest, I canrCOt see much of
that being of value to the current students.
So, like it or not, we are steadily moving more and more into an
online world. And some subjects are moving faster than others.
On 13/02/2026 05:48, Lawrence DOliveiro wrote:
Today I visited a local University where an employee, a friend of mine,
was having his retirement sendoff. While I was there, I had a look in
their Library.
I can remember, years ago, the Library building had four levels, each
full of books. Now, the building is twice the size, by adding the >>equivalent of a second buildingrCOs worth of floor space beside the >>existing one, so it still has four levels, each with double the area.
But all the books (that would have been part of the old collection)
now fit on just one level. There is a new specialist rCLLaw LibraryrCY on >>another level, but the rest is filled with computer terminals, meeting >>spaces etc.
So four (old-size) floorsrCO worth of books is now down to just two.
I had a look at the computing section. I found books dating back ten
years or more. Apart from historical interest, I canrCOt see much of that >>being of value to the current students.
So, like it or not, we are steadily moving more and more into an online >>world. And some subjects are moving faster than others.
The last editions of Unix In A Nutshell and Linux In A Nutshell were
both
published in 2009. Paper books are still a thing, but more so in the
arts and humanities. I'm still kicking myself for leaving my good
friends Kernighan and Ritchie behind when the office got permanently
closed during lockdown.
The last editions of Unix In A Nutshell and Linux In A Nutshell were both
published in 2009. Paper books are still a thing, but more so in the arts
and humanities. I'm still kicking myself for leaving my good friends Kernighan and Ritchie behind when the office got permanently closed during lockdown.
However, O'Reilly and other publishers are still publishing paper books,
with the books being available in soft copy as well, which many people prefer.
For instance, Pearson just published the second edition of my book on
basic *nix programming.
On Wed, 18 Feb 2026 14:01:05 +0000, Aharon Robbins wrote:
However, O'Reilly and other publishers are still publishing paper books, with the books being available in soft copy as well, which many people prefer.
For instance, Pearson just published the second edition of my book on
basic *nix programming.
Thank you for your books! I have several.
I started using UNIX in 1975, and your Shell Programming book is still
well thumbed. And I'm using the gdb pocket reference right now.
--[I deliberately broke the sig sep]
Using UNIX since v6 (1975)...
Use the BIG mirror service in the UK:
http://www.mirrorservice.org
On 18 Feb 2026 14:48:57 GMT Bob Eager <news0009@eager.cx> wrote:
On Wed, 18 Feb 2026 14:01:05 +0000, Aharon Robbins wrote:[I deliberately broke the sig sep]
However, O'Reilly and other publishers are still publishing paper
books,
with the books being available in soft copy as well, which many
people prefer.
For instance, Pearson just published the second edition of my book on
basic *nix programming.
Thank you for your books! I have several.
I started using UNIX in 1975, and your Shell Programming book is still
well thumbed. And I'm using the gdb pocket reference right now.
--
Using UNIX since v6 (1975)...
Use the BIG mirror service in the UK:
http://www.mirrorservice.org
So that's 50 years of cryptic commands with obscure single letter
(U/lcase) parameters. :-)
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