little wrote:
Are you trying to imply that the "Amiga Hardware Reference Manual Third Edition 1991" was written before the amiga made it's debut in 1985?
Nope, the first edition was published in 1986 shortly after the debut. The 1991 is an update for ECS.
When I said earlier "the copyright holders", I was of course trying to explain that the copyright for this book was originally owned by Commodore Amiga, but with all the history that has taken place, the current owners is unknown to me.
little wrote:
whoever owns the copyright to K&R can sue ALL C programmers for "infringement of copyright" since coding C is effectively an unofficial translation of this book from English to a said computer language
You are not comparing the same thing. The K&R C book describes a language and not an object (such as a program) this book describes a bit of patented hardware in English. If K&R were also the authors of the language, I am sure their copyright could have prevented others writing compilers, and probably other books which used explicit C-Syntax, if they had wanted to.
Publications of HRM's are common in the hardware world. They help extend the life of IP protection beyond patents. Whereas any patents registered for the Amiga would have expired by now, the publication of this book has extended protection by perhaps upto 70+ years after 1991.