I consistently hear from folks the same about Bill Gates pushing for volume over anything
else with Xenix. I wonder to what degree that sort of paradigm shift lead to what we see
today with "app stores" and cheap little apps being peddled a dime a dozen. Must
be a viable enough business model if people keep doing it, but it makes me die inside.
There's also the fact though that as the barrier to entry goes down, well, more folks
enter the playing field.
Also I gotta appreciate that Dave Cutler's Bill Gates impersonation is consistent
with other folks mocking over the years. He's probably got a pretty thick skin by
this point (although the financial success probably helps).
Thanks for the share, there are a few other videos linked there from I assume the same
interview, I quite enjoyed them, especially the anecdote of Steve Ballmer's last
ditch effort Denny's breakfast to bring Dave on board.
Something this brings back to mind that I always wonder about with Microsoft and their OS
choices: So they went with Windows NT for their kernel, scraped the Windows environment
off the top of DOS and dolloped it on top. Has there been any explanation over the years
why they also decided to keep the MSDOS CLI interface? It's not like the NT kernel
couldn't handle simple stuff like a UNIX-y shell, tools like grep and sed, etc. and
Microsoft had code in Xenix they probably could've considered using for that. Was it
not wanting to have any licensing questions by avoiding anything that smelled like Xenix
at all? Or was the consumer base at the time that invested in the MSDOS environment that
handing them a Bourne shell with some ubiquitous UNIX tools would've just been
unworkable? Feels like a lost opportunity, they could've had their kernel and their
desktop environment and still given folks a more robust CLI. Instead stuff like UWIN,
Cygwin, etc. had to come along and fill the void. That was something I was hoping
he'd talk about when I clicked, but I didn't catch anything particular about the
CLI choice.
- Matt G.
------- Original Message -------
On Friday, October 20th, 2023 at 4:27 PM, Skip Tavakkolian <fariborz.t(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
This might be interesting to some. It is a piece of a
longer conversation between Dave Plummer and Dave Cutler (RSX11, VMS, WinNT)
https://youtu.be/9K3eMzF6x28?feature=shared