HAHAHHA! SCO! The Silicon Beach pirates ... Linux thieves! Coherent.. I used it on a 386 after playing with Microware's OS9v2 for Color Computers.
I stuck with that COCO3 until the early 90s. I refused to use XT 8088s or MS-Dos because they simply couldn't multitask. I put jNos on one, text-file driven tcpip with tools, for ham radio, then put a bunk IP at the end of the nameserver list and pointed the connection that way. It was a ham radio tcp/ip node list. MAYBE a few hundred kilobytes. A half-hour later the XT was STILL chugging it'a way through the nameserver list, and I pulled the plug. Rr Steven Schear wrote: > In the early-1970s, while working for TRW Data Systems (founded by Larry > and Doug Michaels, who later founded the early commercial Unix provider > Santa Cruz Operations) I led development of a proprietary OS for the > Datapoint 2200. > https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datapoint_2200 > The OS ran on a descrete implementation of the 8008 processor after Intel > had encountered tech and yield issues. The OS supported drivers for > keyboard, CRT, disk and tape drives, telecommunications controlling dozens > of specialized remote terminals, and a hashed access database, With dynamic > overlays it all fit within 16 KB of RAM. > > On Wed, Dec 25, 2019, 5:44 PM jim bell <jdb10...@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> The New York Times: Chuck Peddle Dies at 82; His $25 Chip Helped Start the >> PC Age.https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/24/technology/chuck-peddle-dead.html >> >> >> 6502 microprocessor. >>