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Newsgroups: comp.os.386bsd.questions Path: sserve!newshost.anu.edu.au!munnari.oz.au!news.Hawaii.Edu!ames!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!uknet!festival!castle.ed.ac.uk!richard From: richard@castle.ed.ac.uk (Richard Tobin) Subject: Re: Daemon Picture where? References: <1993Oct5.174308.29629@cscs.ch> Message-ID: <CEH9w2.8Hs@festival.ed.ac.uk> Sender: news@festival.ed.ac.uk (remote news read deamon) Organization: University of Edinburgh Date: Wed, 6 Oct 1993 13:38:25 GMT Lines: 38 In article <1993Oct5.174308.29629@cscs.ch> kuehn@cscs.ch writes: >I recently saw the picture of this nice little daemon on the 4.3BSD Book >by Kirk McKusick. >My question is now if there is a picture of this in electronic form somewhere >around for ftping? You can find it on the BSDI WWW server. Here it is as a uuencoded gif file. The copyright belongs to Kirk McKusick. begin 644 daemon.gif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end -- Richard -- "For thousands of years, [homoeopathic magic] was known to the sorcerors of ancient India, Babylon and Egypt, as well as of Greece and Rome, and at this day it is still resorted to by cunning and malignant savages in Australia, Africa and Scotland." - J G Frazer, The Golden Bough