.\" This module is believed to contain source code proprietary to AT&T. .\" Use and redistribution is subject to the Berkeley Software License .\" Agreement and your Software Agreement with AT&T (Western Electric). .\" .\" @(#)p6 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/8/93 .SH IX. STATISTICS .PP The following numbers are presented to suggest the scale of the Research .UX operation. Those of our users not involved in document preparation tend to use the system for program development, especially language work. There are few important ``applications'' programs. .PP Overall, we have today: .PP .SP .5 .TS center; r5 l. 125 user population 33 maximum simultaneous users 1,630 directories 28,300 files 301,700 512-byte secondary storage blocks used .TE .SP .5 There is a ``background'' process that runs at the lowest possible priority; it is used to soak up any idle \*sCPU\*n time. It has been used to produce a million-digit approximation to the constant \fIe\fR, and other semi-infinite problems. Not counting this background work, we average daily: .SP .5 .TS center; r 5 l. 13,500 commands 9.6 \*sCPU\*n hours 230 connect hours 62 different users 240 log-ins .TE .SP .5 .SH X. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS .PP The contributors to .UX are, in the traditional but here especially apposite phrase, too numerous to mention. Certainly, collective salutes are due to our colleagues in the Computing Science Research Center. R. H. Canaday contributed much to the basic design of the file system. We are particularly appreciative of the inventiveness, thoughtful criticism, and constant support of R. Morris, M. D. McIlroy, and J. F. Ossanna. .[ $LIST$ .]