In a message dated 96-04-11 20:26:44 EDT, jeffb@sware.com writes:
[I told myself I was going to stay out of this, but Jim Bell's dogmatic stance irks me... ] Here's a citation from "Portability of C Programs and the Unix System" by S.C. Johnson and D.M. Ritchie (yes, that Richie) in the Bell System Technical Journal volume 57, Number 6, July-August 1978.
Citing sources from 1978 in the computing field is a little like using dictionaries from the 1800's to dictate modern English usage. My desktop machine has as much computing power as some colleges had during that era. We've come a long way, baby! Yes, in the past, the term "byte" applied to entities other than 8 bits, but "8 bits" IS the commonly accepted, standard meaning of "byte" now, in the present. The fact that the meaning and usage of words can change over time is not relevant to current meaning and usage. Anyone who wishes to dispute this should study the etymology of the word "gay." Jonathan Wienke