Monograph Series on Advanced Computing Systems
Marc Donner
donner at bree.watson.ibm.com
Sat Jun 30 11:35:09 AEST 1990
The USENIX association intends to publish books and monographs
on the general topic of computing systems. The intended audience
for these books is the community of system designers, builders,
users, and scholars. Our intent is to publish material of lasting
interest and importance, with an emphasis on actual systems. Subjects
may include design, implementation, history, and analysis of real
systems. While we are inspired by UNIX and UNIX-inspired systems, we
do not expect to limit our attention to such systems in any way, as we
see ourselves responsible to the entire systems community.
We see several specific needs that we would like to satisfy and
for which we solicit manuscripts. The needs fall in two areas -
books in traditional styles and formats about topics important to
the systems community and things new or unusual.
Among things new or unusual, we are interested in exploring at least these
ideas:
Significant systems - many significant systems are documented, if at all, only
in reference manuals or user guides. Journal publications often concentrate
on narrow specific details, as is appropriate for focussed technical
audiences. What is lost is the broad description of the design and
its evolution, with consideration of the success and failure of
specific features and lessons learned.
Code - We are interested in exploring the possibilities of publishing
code to read. A truism among the programming community is that one learns
to write good programs by reading good and bad programs. Sadly,
there is little code available to read. The recent interest in
public-domain code and open systems has increased the quantity
of high-quality source code available. Many open questions in the
publication of code remain to be explored. The conventional codex
form, long accepted as appropriate for literary works and texts, may
not be the right one for programs. Very few experiments have
been made with this form, something that we hope to encourage. The
audience for published code includes serious students of systems,
including both the undergraduate and advanced levels, and practitioners
involved with development, modification, and analysis of actual systems.
Important technical reports - many important technical reports,
issued in small numbers by industrial organizations, research
labs, or university departments, are not disseminated as widely
as they merit. This is often because the originating organization
doesn't have the resources or the will to publish them more widely
and because the material is deemed inappropriate by commercial
publishers because of its narrow scope or limited size. Many technical
reports are too large for journal publication and too small for
conventional book publication. We hope to provide a means of
publication and distribution of the best of these.
To submit a manuscript or proposal for consideration for the Monograph
Series, send a copy to
Monograph Editor
USENIX Association
2560 Ninth Street, Suite 215
Berkeley, CA 94710
or send electronic mail to
monographs at usenix.org
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