#print You may have been wondering what to do in case Unix prints faster than you can read. It is often helpful to suspend Unix output temporarily in order to read it, and then restart it to let more output print. On Unix a ^S "suspends" output printing temporarily, and a ^Q "quits suspension" of output, that is, it restarts printing. ^S, or "control-s", is entered by holding down the CTRL key and pressing the letter 's' (and similarly for ^Q). Neither of these characters appear on your terminal, so as not to be confused with the real output. There is a file in this directory called "zip". Print its contents while controlling the output with ^S and ^Q, and then do what it says. #create zip This is a file called zip which should print rather quickly. You were asked to do something that the file explained but right now I'm stalling. Actually, I want you to make a copy of the file beginning with a capital letter x and ending in the digit 1 in a file which I think should be called um... .. . um, let's see now .. . oh yes, I remember! It's called X2. See if you can manage that. When you're done you can type the same old ready that you're so used to typing by now. #create X1 ooga booga #copyin #user #uncopyin #cmp X1 X2 #log #next 13.1a 5