[net.general] A CALL FOR WIZARDS, WRITERS AND UNIX GURUS

mitch@well.UUCP (07/14/86)

A CALL FOR WIZARDS, WRITERS AND UNIX GURUS                    July 13, 1986

My company, The Waite Group, is creating an exciting contributed book called 
THE UNIX PAPERS. The book contains articles written by a broad range of Unix 
experts, gurus, wizards and spokespersons, collected together and edited by 
myself and the staff at The Waite Group.  

We are approaching the most interesting experts and authors in the Unix field 
including: Bill Joy, Rusty Smith, Dennis Ritchie, David Korn, Steve Bourne, 
Erik Fair, Donald Knuth, Peter Marvit, Mohandas Nai, Gene Dronek, Roger Sippl, 
Nico Neirenberg, Jim Stonebraker, Geoff Goodfellow, Dave Woods, Rebecca Thomas, 
Bill Croft, David Kashton and many others.  We are also interesting in hearing 
from less well known but similarly talented Unix programmers and writers to 
make a contribution to the UNIX PAPERS.

The goal of THE UNIX PAPERS is to provide insightful information on the Unix 
operating system and business market, to reveal some of the more hidden and 
obscure truths about Unix, and to do all this in an interesting format.  The 
audience level is intermediate to advanced business people, programmers and 
anyone who wants to know about the cutting edge of this powerful and elegant 
operating system.

The book consists of three types of contributions:

a. TUTORIALS on topics that have never been adequately discussed in the 
literature (uucp, termcap, curses, etc) as well as new concepts arising in Unix 
(unix on risc, unix databases, etc)
b. ISSUE PAPERS by experts in a particular area of Unix (these discuss 
controversy, the future of, etc)
c. CASE HISTORY papers which tell the bottom line about real Unix machines, 
software, installations, etc. 

I am writing to you at this time to see if you would be interested in 
authoring an article on one of the topics in the list, or an article on 
something we have missed you may think is hot.

DETAILS ABOUT THE UNIX PAPERS

The Unix Papers will be published by Howard W. Sams in the beginning of 1987.  
It will contain 15 contributors.  The average length article is 20 pages.  
Authors are paid a fee, and their photograph and biography appear at the 
beginning of their article.  

ABOUT THE WAITE GROUP

The Waite Group is a collective of authors in the San Francisco Bay Area. The 
Waite Group has produced 40 award winning computer titles over the last 10 
years, and is known for its high quality titles on Unix, C and MS-DOS.  Among 
its most notable books are: (from Howard Sams) C Primer Plus, UNIX Primer Plus 
(Berkeley), UNIX System V Primer, Advanced Unix, MS-DOS Bible, MS-DOS 
Developer's Guide (from New American Library), Assembly Language Primer for the 
IBM PC & XT, and Bluebook of Assembly Language Routines for the IBM PC & XT.

Here is the outline and our targeted list of contributors. Topics marked with 
a ** have been taken as of June 26, 1986.

*******************************************************************
THE UNIX PAPERS OUTLINE

**FROM DOS TO UNIX
        Thousands of MS-DOS users are learning Unix.  Jim Rosenberg tells 
these MS-DOS users all about UNIX, explaining both the Unix file system and the 
Unix command set in a language MS-DOS users understand.

**NEWSNET IN 10 EASY STEPS
        Waite Group staffer Harry Henderson removes the complexity surrounding 
the use of readnews, rn, vnews and postnews, in a simple tutorial that will 
have you discovering valuable newsnet bulletins for hours.

UNIX ON 3M MACHINES
        What is the future of Unix on the 3M machines being built by NeXT, 
Atari and Apple? How will these machines work, what will they offer that 
current 0.3M machines (Macintosh, etc) don't offer, what will they cost, what 
kind of software will we see.

LOW COST UNIX (MICROPORT) AND THE FUTURE OF HIGH COST XENIX
        Now that a complete certified System V Unix for the XT and AT is 
available for $160, how long can Xenix remain priced at $495?  The author of 
this contribution explores what the new low cost Unix kernals are like, and how 
they will change the microcomputer/Unix/Xenix landscape.

THE FUTURE OF BERKELEY UNIX
        This contribution reveals where BSD4.3 is headed, how it is diverging 
from System V, what that means in the market and in the university, and how the 
end user will be effected by these two diverging operating systems.

WHAT IS WRONG WITH UNIX - WHAT IS RIGHT WITH UNIX
        Sprinkled throughout THE UNIX PAPERS are little one, two and three 
paragraph quotes from our authors about the good and the bad of Unix.

UNIX ON RISC
        What does it mean when Unix is running on a RISC machine, like the IBM 
RT, or larger minis? MIPS tie in.

UNIX ON THE 68020
        The 68020 offers VAX-like processing power in the microcomputer price 
range, and are being found in large numbers of Unix based computers.  This 
chapter explores the reasons the 68000 line is a good choice for a Unix based 
micro.

UNIX ON THE 80286/386
        IBM has made a firm commitment to the 8086 line of microprocessors.  
Therefore it is likely that Unix will be offered on the next generation of 
microcomputers based on the 80286 and 80386.  This chapter explores the reasons 
that the 80286 line is a good choice for a Unix based microcomputer.

BENCHMARKS AND UNIX
        Here we show you how to understand what Unix benchmarks mean.  Several 
of the most popular Unix supermicros and minis are compared using different 
benchmarks.

DATA BASE PROGRAMS UNDER UNIX
        What is the equivalent Unix 1-2-3 clone?  Is there a database program 
as good as dBASE II that runs under Unix?  Is it a memory hog?  Learn these 
things and more. 

NETWORKING UNIX
        Networking File System (NFS) is explained as is AT&T's Remote File 
System and Streams.

GRAPHICS
        Included here are NAPLPS and LU.G.

UUCP, USENET, AND WORLDNET
        What is happening with Unix and its existing networks.  Is it growing? 
 What direction?  What new social structures are forming as a result of these 
networks?  What is WorldNet? 

**ELECTRONIC MAIL
        Dave Taylor of H.P. Labs teaches you everything you ever wanted to 
know every version of mail under Unix including /bin/mail, mailx, rmail, mh, 
elm and AT&T's new mail.

**UNIX ON BIG MACHINES
        Chris Morgan tells us what it is like to run Unix on a Cyber system 
and what the State of California Unix computing is like today.

SECURITY UNDER UNIX
         This section goes inside Unix to expose its delicate security under 
belly, and presents simple techniques that solve these weaknesses.

UNIX TEXT MANIPULATION AND DESKTOP PUBLISHING
        Find about what Unix can do for text manipulation and desktop 
publishing. Learn about TeX.  Various Unix Word Processors are compared to the 
popular MS-DOS versions of Word, WordStar and others.

UNIX EXPERT SYSTEMS
        Franz Lisp

REAL TIME UNIX
        Who?

EMERGING UNIX STANDARDS
        AT&T is merging Berkeley Unix 4.2 features in to System V Release 3, 
while Berkeley is headed off in another direction.  What does this mean?

WHAT SHELL?
        The new Korn shell has the best features of the c-shell and the Bourne 
shell.  The author of this section tells us what the major differences in the 
numerous Unix shells are and how to decide which is right for you.

******************************************************************************

If I have piqued your interest I would love to discuss the design and nature 
of the book and what chapter(s) you might write. Of course our ideas can be 
easily modified if you would like to write about something we have not 
mentioned.  Let me know if you are interested.

You can send me e-mail here on the Well (well!mitch), or call me at 
415-929-7088.  The editor for this book is Jim Stockford, also on the Well 
(well!jim).

Thank you very much for your time,

Sincerely,

Mitchell Waite
President

The Waite Group
3220 Sacramento Street
San Francisco CA 94115
well!mitch