Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!decwrl!sgi!calcite!vjs From: vjs@calcite.UUCP (Vernon Schryver) Newsgroups: comp.unix.sysv386 Subject: Re: man pages (was: '386 Unix Wars) Summary: TANSTAFL Keywords: sco unix interactive wars Message-ID: <103@calcite.UUCP> Date: 12 Jan 91 06:21:47 GMT References: <95@comix.UUCP> <2862@cirrusl.UUCP> <52585@bigtex.cactus.org> <1991Jan10.212820.19557@cunixf.cc.columbia.edu> Organization: Rhyolite Software, Mountain View, CA Lines: 20 In article <1991Jan10.212820.19557@cunixf.cc.columbia.edu>, cy5@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu (Conway Yee) writes: > Why [are AT&T on line manuals] so expensive? Presumably, all the > documentation is already > online somewhere so that it can be easily updated. Nobody uses > typewriters anymore. Everything is word processed. The same arguement applies to (other) software. Few of us still use card punches or rotory reperforators, but we want more than media cost for our programing efforts. (Weren't roff or nroff used for the first UNIX technical reports?) Maybe the AT&T lisense fees for manuals are high for the same reason the AT&T lisense fees for System V are non-trivial. (Last I heard their starting negoiating point for SVR4 was a significant percentage of the list cost of the hardware.) Maybe AT&T is trying to find a way to make money on computers, or to at least meet a rather awesome payroll. There's been a bit of that going around since the first commercial machines. Vernon Schryver, vjs@calcite.uucp