Splinter Unix?
Root Boy Jim
rbj at icst-cmr.arpa
Fri May 20 11:06:29 AEST 1988
From: "Rich Strebendt, AT&T-DSG @ Indian Hill West" <res at ihlpe.att.com>
Then UNIX made its appearance in a couple of dialects. Few machines
supported it, and little commercial software was available for it. It
was essentially an academic playtoy. AT&T promoted it, and a number of
software houses developed products for it, so it gradually became a
viable product in the commercial marketplace. Also, many of the
academics who enjoyed playing with UNIX in school became employed
programmers who wanted to buy UNIX systems to do real work with.
Finally, AT&T and Sun got together to merge the two main dialects of
UNIX into a single product. Now there is a threat of a third real
alternative to the DEC and IBM proprietary systems -- a commercially
supported UNIX which can be run on many different vendors hardware.
This is what DEC and IBM would like to destroy.
You left out what *really* made UNIX popular: Berkeley.
But then, you *did* say you were biased :-)
As for OSF, they should give their money and machines to the FSF.
Rich Strebendt
...!ihnp4![iwsl6|ihlpe|ihaxa]!res
(Root Boy) Jim Cottrell <rbj at icst-cmr.arpa>
National Bureau of Standards
Flamer's Hotline: (301) 975-5688
The opinions expressed are solely my own
and do not reflect NBS policy or agreement
My name is in /usr/dict/words. Is yours?
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