Why use U* over VMS
Blair P. Houghton
bhoughto at cmdnfs.intel.com
Tue Nov 6 10:09:03 AEST 1990
I told you you knew what was coming! :-)
In article <1990Nov5.191934.19739 at murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> Ran Atkinson <randall at Virginia.EDU> writes:
>BTW, I agree with Jay that the POSIX standard is looser than it
>should be -- especially in the Shell & Tools area. The fact
>that DEC plans a POSIX compliant VMS without a major overhaul
>is an excellent existence proof that the standard is too loose.
Did they say it wasn't a major overhaul? EE Times
article on page 1 ("Digital to take RISC/Unix road",
Oct. 29, '90) (the title isn't actually descriptive; DEC's
still clinging to this dead baby (i.e., VMS) and hoping
someone will want to buy it; they claim tens thousand of
applications (most of them of course options to SET :-))
nd half a million installed systems) indicates little
about the actual effort. DEC may have 20,000 or 2 people
working on it, for all anyone knows.
They call it an "open VMS". What's that mean? Beats me.
The time-frame is apparently _next_quarter_ (that's BEFORE
April of 1991, kids) for POSIX.1, .2, and .3 compliance. The
rest of it is supposed to be out by "mid-1991."
As to whether it will handle pipes, I dare say it should!
But there I dare pretty far, not having read the
system-services section of POSIX (or any other section, for
that matter), but would it be Unix without pipes? Heck, no!
--Blair
"THIS, I gotta SEE!"
P.S. to Randall: leave the cute 'Followup-to:' crap in
alt.flame. Some of us are serious about this discussion.
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