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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Promotion! Like Our New Facebook Timeline Page for 10,000 Bits! Post 302650423 by agama on Saturday 2nd of June 2012 10:59:24 PM
Old 06-02-2012
I'd think these would make good milestones on the timeline:

The epoch, Jan 1 1970


And from the nice time line posted at UNIX History

AT&T Labs Research UNIX Time-Sharing System First Edition (V1) November 3, 1971 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

AT&T Labs Research UNIX Time-Sharing System Second Edition (V2) June 12, 1972 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

1BSD March 9, 1978 <---- already on the FB timeline

XENIX OS August 25, 1980 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

SunOS 1.0 February 1982 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

UNIX System V R1 January 1983 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

HP-UX 1.0 (S500) H1 ??? 1983 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

AIX/RT 2 ??? 1986 AIX Version 1, introduced in 1986 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

SunOS 4.1.1 (Solaris 1) November 1990 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

Linux 0.01 August 1, 1991 <---- first published Linux kernel published in October of 1991

386 BSD 0.0 February 1992 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

FreeBSD 1.0 December 1993 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

OpenBSD October 1995 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

Darwin 1.0 April 5, 2000 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

OpenSolaris (build 21) July 26, 2005 <---- OpenSolaris first released May 5, 2008 added to FB timeline by Neo

iPhone OS 1.0 June 29, 2007 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

Android 1.0 September 23, 2008 <---- added to FB timeline by Neo

Moderator's Comments:
Mod Comment Neo: 10,000 Bit Transferred... Thanks for the timeline suggestions!
This User Gave Thanks to agama For This Post:
 

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TM::ResourceAble(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     TM::ResourceAble(3pm)

NAME
TM::ResourceAble - Topic Maps, abstract trait for resource-backed Topic Maps SYNOPSIS
package MyNiftyMap; use TM; use base qw(TM); use Class::Trait ('TM::ResourceAble'); 1; my $tm = new MyNiftyMap; $tm->url ('http://nirvana/'); warn $tm->mtime; # or at runtime even: use TM; Class::Trait->apply ('TM', qw(TM::ResourceAble)); my $tm = new TM; warn $tm->mtime; DESCRIPTION
This traits adds methods to provide the role resource to a map. That allows a map to be associated with a resource which is addressed by a URL (actually a URI for that matter). Predefined URIs The following resources, actually their URIs are predefined: "io:stdin" Symbolizes the UNIX STDIN file descriptor. The resource is all text content coming from this file. "io:stdout" Symbolizes the UNIX STDOUT file descriptor. "null:" Symbolizes a resource which never delivers any content and which can consume any content silently (like "/dev/null" under UNIX). Predefined URI Methods "inline" An inlined resource is a resource which contains all content as part of the URI. Currently the TM content is to be written in AsTMa=. Example: inlined:donald (duck) INTERFACE
Methods url $url = $tm->url $tm->url ($url) Once an object of this class is instantiated it keeps the URL of the resource to which it is associated. With this method you can retrieve and set that. No special further action is taken otherwise. mtime $time = $tm->mtime This function returns the UNIX time when the resource has been modified last. 0 is returned if the result cannot be determined. All methods from LWP are supported. Special resources are treated as follows: "null:" always has mtime 0 "io:stdin" always has an mtime 1 second in the future. The idea is that STDIN always has new content. "io:stdout" always has mtime 0. The idea is that STDOUT never changes by itself. SEE ALSO
TM AUTHOR INFORMATION
Copyright 200[67], Robert Barta <drrho@cpan.org>, All rights reserved. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html perl v5.10.1 2010-08-04 TM::ResourceAble(3pm)
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