#1,441 in Computers & technology books

Reddit mentions of The New Hacker's Dictionary - 3rd Edition

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 5

We found 5 Reddit mentions of The New Hacker's Dictionary - 3rd Edition. Here are the top ones.

The New Hacker's Dictionary - 3rd Edition
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    Features:
  • Used Book in Good Condition
Specs:
ColorYellow
Height9 Inches
Length6 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateOctober 1996
Weight1.69976404002 Pounds
Width1.43 Inches

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Found 5 comments on The New Hacker's Dictionary - 3rd Edition:

u/Sawta · 1 pointr/AskReddit

If anyone is interested, you can also buy The New Hacker's Dictionary off of amazon, here

Note: I used my Amazon Associates reference code in that link, I hope people don't mind if I try to make $1 or so off of potential sales.

u/ReactsWithWords · 1 pointr/explainlikeimfive

OK, in terms of Authority Figures, how about the Internet Engineering Task Force?

Or, if you want historical documents, you can't beat The Jargon File (Note: If you insist on a dead tree version of that, We got you covered there, too - note how A) it's the 3rd edition, and B) it's copy written 1996, which means the first and second editions are even older.

I've yet to see a single source that's older to say otherwise. If you know of one, I'd love to see it.

u/Plutarch_Rime · 1 pointr/newjersey

The ultimate bathroom book is the New Hacker's Dictionary, based on the famous jargon file. It is a list of old computing slang and terminology up to, mostly, the 1980s.

Where known, the origin of the term is listed (this is edited by Eric Raymond), and you'll see a lot of schools you expect - MIT, Stanford (SAIL), etc.

You'll also see Rutgers pop up a surprising amount of times.

I used to study over on Busch in a basement in...I forget the building. This was the early 90s when they still had PLATO terminals set up and working. The whole building seemed to hum with technology.

I wasn't majoring in anything technical but even then Rutgers had a surprisingly high-tech groove. There are Usenet posts out there that I made in 1993 from the Livingston library. Thanks to Rutgers, I got on the Internet via shell (for free) in 1991. Maybe a lot of Universities offered those accounts universally to students but I remember actually staying up all night to get into the library when it opened in the morning, just to screw around on FTP sites.