| Corbato, F.J., et al. The Compatible Time-Sharing System, A Programmer's Guide. M.I.T. Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1963, p.10. |
....original; they have accumulated over the years. The first example of questionable intermediate delivery acknowledgements noticed by the authors was the wait message of the M.I.T. Compatible Time Sharing System, which the system printed on the user s terminal whenever the user entered a command[3]. The message had some value in the early days of the system, when crashes and communication failures were so frequent that intermediate acknowledgements provided some needed reassurance that all was well. The end to end argument relating to encryption was first publicly discussed by Branstad in ....
Corbato, F.J., et al. The Compatible Time-Sharing System, A Programmer's Guide. M.I.T. Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1963, p.10.
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