Santa Cruz de la Sierra | Santa Cruz | Santa Barbara, California | Santa Fe | Santa Fe, New Mexico | Santa Barbara | Santa Claus | Santa Catarina (state) | Santa Catarina | University of California, Santa Cruz | University of California, Santa Barbara | Operation Overlord | Operation Enduring Freedom | Santa Cruz, California | Santa Ana | Operation Barbarossa | Santa Ana, California | Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe | Santa Maria | Operation Market Garden | Celia Cruz | Santa Monica, California | Santa Fe Province | Santa Rosa | Santa Maria Capua Vetere | Santa Ana, El Salvador | Santa Clara University | Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development | St. John's College (Annapolis/Santa Fe) | Santa Monica |
Various Unix people, particularly Peter H. Salus, Dennis Ritchie and Berny Goodheart, lobbied Unix's various owners (AT&T, Novell, the Santa Cruz Operation) for many years to allow the book to be published officially.
Since then, occasional bursts of Unix factionalism have broken out, such as the HP/SCO "3DA" alliance in 1995, and Project Monterey in 1998, a teaming of IBM, SCO, Sequent and Intel which was followed by litigation (SCO v. IBM) between IBM and the new SCO, formerly Caldera.