AT&T arrogance
Landon C. Noll
chongo at nsc.UUCP
Sun Dec 2 20:51:50 AEST 1984
>I understand AT&T knows they cannot continue to survive with only
>this constituency, but without it, Un*x (ed: last word modified) wouldn't
> be alive in the commercial marketplace to survive.
AT&T marketing seems to ignore what brought UN*X up to the level it is at
now. Their marketing actions seem to be going towards stomping out any
other 'non-standard' UN*X system. One wonders if down the road, some company
named Carterphone will challenge their trademark of UN*X. Maybe some small
firm in a last attempt to stay afloat might try to claim that AT&T has engaged
in unfair business practices? But then again the AT&T legal staff might be
able to delay the legal actions long enough for 'their standard' to be well
established. My guess is AT&T is already well prepaired in case this happens.
AT&T marketing, in my opinion does not understand what UN*X is. To me, UN*X
is not a pile of code to which someone at AT&T has blessed. UN*X is not
a set of source listings that generate a diff listing less than Y inches thick.
UN*X is a way of doing things. UN*X is a dynamic idea. The UN*X idea was
started by folks like Ritchie,Kernighan,Thompson (and others) at Bell Labs,
and is even now being enhanced by thousands of others over the world. UN*X
is people in net.unix-wizards asking for advice. UN*X is people posting
bug fixes to net.bugs.foo.
To force UN*X into a plastic wrapped package is not UN*X. To declare all
future versions to be upward compatible is to condemn the users to have to
eat the original design flaws. UN*X was able to evolve beyond more static
commercial operating systems because people were free to improve it.
This is not to say that some versions of UN*X were not a setback, but rather
that having access to source code and being able to fix/improve it gave
UN*X a big plus.
Anyway let it be known that the above statments are my own and that this
does not reflect any company stand.
chongo <GNU's not UN*X> /\gg/\
BTW: UN*X is a usenet symbol for the 'non-standard' versions of Unix
Unix is a trademark of AT&T Bell Labs
AT&T Bell labs are a footnote of Unix :-)
--
"Don't blame me, I voted for Mondale!"
John Alton 85'
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