Paul

I wonder whether or not you can explain the following:

I was checking to be sure I'd remembered what BTU stood for while preparing 
a post and, rather than limiting myself to an IBM site, I just tried Google - 
like 
you always do!

The site which confirmed that '"basic transmission unit" (BTU)' was correct 
was TermWiki(TM):

http://www.termwiki.com/EN:basic_transmission_unit_(BTU)

Well, obviously the temptation was overpowering!

I entered "USS" in the "Look for ..." field.

<quote>

unformatted system service (USS)
Industry: Software; Category: Globalization software service
A communications function that translates a character-coded command, such 
as a LOGON or LOGOFF command, into a field-formatted command for 
processing by formatted system services. See also formatted system service. 
225 B (33 words) - 16:55, 20 June 2010

</quote>

This was the first of all of 7 "hits" and - sorry John, I hope you're strong 
enough to withstand the disappointment - no "United States Ship" - whoops, 
sorry again, on checking closely I see that the 7th is a reference to "USS" as 
an United States Ship!

Unfortunately my elation was just a little bit tempered by the 2nd and 
5th "hits" - as anyone who is really interested can find out for themselves!

But, of course, the question is: by what clearly superior method for garnering 
the references did TermWiki succeed so brilliantly where other, cruder, 
methods failed utterly?

Chris Mason

On Mon, 2 May 2011 10:11:56 -0500, Paul Gilmartin <[email protected]> 
wrote:

>On Mon, 2 May 2011 09:25:51 -0400, Chicklon, Thomas wrote:
>
>>OK, you win. USS is officially only to be used when speaking of VTAM's
>>table thing.
>>
>>So, if you (and some others I'm sure) want to preserve the purity of the
>>acronym USS, good for you. Don't misuse it. Just leave the rest of us
>>out of it.
>>
>It's interesting that the link Kirk Wolf posted:
>
>    http://www.acronymfinder.com/USS.html
>
>rates the incorrect USS (Unix System Services) number six, and
>USS (Unix Systems Services) number fourteen respectively.  The
>usage correct according to the IBM Glossary doesn't even make the
>list.  And when I filter by Information Technology, USS (Unix
>System Services) becomes number one, and USS (Unix Systems Services)
>becomes number two.  Now, I suspect that AcronymFinder hasn't an
>army of gnomes researching and consulting authorities to verify that
>USS (Unix System Services) or USS (Unix Systems Services) is
>technically correct.  More likely, they have a nest of spiders that
>crawl the Web, and whenever they find constructs such as USS (Unix
>System Services) or USS (Unix Systems Services) they add weight
>to the ranking of that interpretation.
>
>When I want to understand an acronym, I rarely RTFM; more often
>I simply type the acronym in a Google search box, and take
>whatever appears in the first page of hits as conventional,
>although possibly technically incorrect.  So Chris Mason's
>polemics are likely counterproductive of his end: the more
>stridently he denies that USS stands for Unix System Services, or
>that USS stands for Unix Systems Services, provoking followups
>that sometimes quote him, the higher he boosts the construct he
>detests in AcronymFinder's ratings.
>
>He'd more effectively further his cause of eliminating use of
>USS (Unix System Services) and USS (Unix Systems Services) if
>he'd simply STFU.  (AcronymFinder gets that one almost right.)
>
>-- gil

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