Another Addition: SCO's May 2003 "Dear commercial Linux user" letter

 
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Old 03-12-2009
Another Addition: SCO's May 2003 "Dear commercial Linux user" letter

Because Groklaw only began to cover SCO's litigation after SCO sent a letter to commercial Linux users in May 2003, somehow the letter never made it into our collection. But now I'm happy to add it to Groklaw's history of the SCO litigations. Its permanent home will be on our Contracts page, if you want to find it down the road. Can you imagine if I had not taken time off to find things like this?
Here's the intriguing part: there is no mention of UnixWare by name at all.

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TOUPPER(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							TOUPPER(3)

NAME
toupper, tolower - convert letter to upper or lower case SYNOPSIS
#include <ctype.h> int toupper(int c); int tolower(int c); DESCRIPTION
toupper() converts the letter c to upper case, if possible. tolower() converts the letter c to lower case, if possible. If c is not an unsigned char value, or EOF, the behavior of these functions is undefined. RETURN VALUE
The value returned is that of the converted letter, or c if the conversion was not possible. CONFORMING TO
C89, C99, 4.3BSD. BUGS
The details of what constitutes an uppercase or lowercase letter depend on the current locale. For example, the default "C" locale does not know about umlauts, so no conversion is done for them. In some non-English locales, there are lowercase letters with no corresponding uppercase equivalent; the German sharp s is one example. SEE ALSO
isalpha(3), setlocale(3), towlower(3), towupper(3), locale(7) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. GNU
1993-04-04 TOUPPER(3)