And by concatenation, that's how we wound up with a VMS clone on our desktops.
________________________________
From: Marc Rochkind <mrochkind(a)gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, December 6, 2024 11:10 AM
To: The UNIX Historical Society <tuhs(a)tuhs.org>
Subject: [TUHS] Interesting post about Microsoft and UNIX
I just came across a 1995 post from Gordon Letwin, early Microsoft employee and lead
architect of OS/2, about the history of OS/2. There are a few paragraphs in it about
Microsoft and UNIX. Here's Letwin's post:
https://gunkies.org/wiki/Gordon_Letwin_OS/2_usenet_post
And the UNIX-related paragraphs:
It's extremely hard to do development work on an operating system when someone else
controls the standard. "Control" in this case is a matter of public perception.
For example, Microsoft was once very big in the Unix world. In fact, we considered it
our candidate for the future desktop operating system, when machines got powerful enough
to run something good. We were the worlds biggest seller of Unix systems. DOS was, when
we first wrote it, a one-time throw-away product intended to keep IBM happy so that
they'd buy our languages.
The UNIX contracts were all done when Bell Labs was regulated and couldn't sell Unix
into the commerical marketplace. So although they wrote it and were paid royalties, they
couldn't develop it in competition to us. But after a few years that changed. Bell
was degregulated and now they were selling Unix directly, in competition to us! They
might sell it for cheaper than we had to pay them in royalties! But that wasn't the
real killer, the real killer was the Bell now controlled the standard. If we wrote an API
extension that did X, and Bell wrote an incompatible one that did Y, which one would
people write for? The ISVs know that AT&T was a very big company and that they'd
written the original, so they'd believe that AT&T controlled the standard, not
MS, and that belief would then define reality. So we'd always just be waiting for
what AT&T announced and then frantically trying to duplicate it.
Bill Gates knew, right away, that there was no strong future in Unix for us any more.
Fortunately at that time, DOS was taking off and we were learning, along with everyone
else, about the power of standards. So the primary OS team - the Unix guys - joined with
the secondary OS team - the DOS guys - and the earliest versions of OS/2 were born. (This
was before IBM came on board, so it wasn't called OS/2!)
Marc Rochkind