On Thu, 06 Mar 2003 23:02:48 -0500 "Brett I. Holcomb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey, if you can't make a success with a product then use lawyers. I think this is all about UnixWare and Project Monterey. I think SCO did, in fact, get screwed by IBM on this one. SCO did LOTS of programming with UnixWare and AIX for this project, which should have resulted in one Unix core source and then variants on that from each vendor. (Sounds similar to UL.) I think IBM took what they could and did not continue, leaving SCO stranded. I went to a Project Montery presentation at IBM here in Stockholm and was told that Unix vendors would use a common base that they would all develop, and that each would add value. For the programmer, they were offering a single API for development and administration. It all sounded good. I think that after SCO did lots of stuff to improve AIX (which really lacked some important features at the time), IBM said thanks and did not continue. In effect, they got what they needed. Many AIX improvements that have helped it recently were the result of work done with SCO. I think SCO may have been a little naive about how the various ways the project could go. So, SCO did help IBM make a success with AIX. The return help in making UnixWare better never happened. -- +····························+·······························+ · Roger Oberholtzer · E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] · · OPQ Systems AB · WWW: http://www.opq.se/ · · Erik Dahlbergsgatan 41-43 · Phone: Int + 46 8 314223 · · 115 34 Stockholm · Mobile: Int + 46 733 621657 · · Sweden · Fax: Int + 46 8 302602 · +····························+·······························+ _______________________________________________ Linux-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc -> http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users