stan@toaster.SFSU.EDU (Stan Osborne) (10/17/90)
UNIX Colloquium, (The first of four or five this semester.) Invited Specialist: Asa Romberger, Chief Technical Officer, Unisoft Free and Open to the Public Time: 4:00-5:30 pm Room: 429, Thornton Hall, San Francisco State University Sponsored by: Computer Science Department Title: System V Release 4 from AT&T Abstract: + How did SVR4 come about and what is its derivation. + An overview sketch of what it contains. + The relationship of UNIX International to the AT&T UNIX Systems Laboratory: - The model for how future functionality is chosen for SVR4. - What is currently planned for future releases. Refreshments will be served. Finding the University; etc. The San Francisco State University Campus is on the west side of 19th Avenue (Hwy 1), between the cross streets of Holloway and Winslow. Thornon Hall is the 9 story building behind the only 8 story building (Hensil Hall) on 19th Avenue and it is at the northeastern corner of campus. MUNI and SAMTRANS bus lines and the M street car pass by the SFSU Campus. BART stations are about 1 mile away. MUNI busses can get you the rest of the way if you take BART. You will be competing with afternoon and evening students (and faculty) for parking places. Allow 15-30 minutes to find a park- ing place and to walk to Thornton Hall. Some handicap parking is available on 19th Avenue and Holloway. Most parking on streets near campus if free, but beware, many places near campus have a 2 hour limit before 6pm. Be sure to check the street signs. There is a large parking structure on campus. The only entrance to the parking structure is on the west side of campus by Lake Merced and the golf course. To use the parking structure costs $2.00. (This may have gone up recently.) Parking tickets start at $10.00 and towing charges for parking on private property (the nearby shopping center, etc.) are substantially higher. We have no idea how many people will want to attend, so your guess is as good as ours about how early to arrive to get a good seat. Gerald Eisman, Computer Science Department, San Francisco State University Internet: eisman@cs.sfsu.edu Usenet: cshub!eisman Voice: (415) 338-1008 -- Stan Osborne, Computer Science Department, San Francisco State University Internet: stan@cs.sfsu.edu Usenet: cshub!stan Voice: (415) 338-2168