Ted

Since the cat's been let out of the bag once more, I'll try to clean up the 
usual mess yet again!

I don't know what malign influence even led me to look at this thread which 
would otherwise, from the subject line, not be of interest. It must be having 
to change the archive month!

Indeed, I wonder how often this particular cat has been let loose under the 
disguise of a subject line which I will not have thought to try to follow and 
the 
resulting disinformation gone unchallenged.

> Is anybody else sick of the USS argument?

Well, in a sense I am but not for the same reason as you - from the following 
evidence.

> IBM has used the term in many documents.

And they are each and every last one of them wrong.

First they are wrong because of the following which I seem to be obliged to 
trot out against the forces of massive obstinacy every time:

http://www-01.ibm.com/software/globalization/terminology/u.html#x2042481

Then John Eells (John Eells <[email protected]>) clarified the matter long 
ago. In principle this should clear the matter up without question but I guess 
there's too much IBM-MAIN "street cred" involved in defending this 
indefensible position.

I'll even make it just that little bit easier for you this time since I have 
the 
impression it would have gone too much against the grain actually to follow up 
on my previous attempts to point you to this post:

<quote>

> I still think that IBM should have chosen another acronym for Unix than  
USS. I believe VTAM USS table is still valid, and still used, so it is  
confusing 
to me that IBM should use the same acronym for something that is still in use.

We did not chose "USS" as an acronym for z/OS UNIX System Services. It's 
not on the list of names people are supposed to use, and nobody in IBM 
should use this abbreviation to mean z/OS UNIX System Services. (Anyone 
from IBM who thinks differently should contact me so I can tell them why 
they're wrong.)

In reality, herding cats is easier than making absolutely sure that everyone 
uses the correct full and short names all the time in all contexts, formal and 
informal, but we keep trying.

</quote>

http://alabamamaps.ua.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0907&L=ibm-
main&T=0&F=&S=&P=198809

It was only after digging this up that I can see we both decided that "cats" 
were involved!

> So, I tend to hold that over a few on IBM-MAIN.

Well thank you for the attempt at protection but I fear it won't work, there is 
one enormous hole!

> Terminology evolves.

Not when it leads to ambiguity as this misuse strongly has the risk of doing. 
It's only the misled and those who persist in continuing to mislead who imagine 
they are evolving.

Chris Mason

On Sun, 1 May 2011 17:38:12 +0000, Ted MacNEIL <[email protected]> 
wrote:

>>It's not USSR (;-) ) but USS.
>
>Is anybody else sick of the USS argument?
>
>IBM has used the term in many documents.
>
>So, I tend to hold that over a few on IBM-MAIN.
>
>Terminology evolves.
>-
>Ted MacNEIL

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