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On Wed, Jun 19, 2024 at 2:56âŻAM <arnold(a)skeeve.com> wrote:
The "odd only" policy may be true, but
it's not what I was told; I
was told that the policy was to release externally one version behind
what was being run internally.
That's how I remember Otis Wilson explaining it to us as
commercial licensees at a licensing meeting in the early 1980s.
We had finally completed the PWB 3.0 license to replace the V7
commercial license (AT&T would rename this System III - but we knew it as
PWB 3.) during the negociations Summit had already moved on to the next
version - PWB 4.0. IMO: Otis was not ready to start that process again.
With the consent decree done and Divestiture in the
works, AT&T was
going to be allowed get into the computer business.
Exactly, and Charlie Brown wanted to compete with IBM in particularâwhich
was an issueâby the time of Judge Green, the microprocessor-based
workstations had started to make huge inroads against the mini-computers.
AT&T management (Brown *et al*), still equated the "computer business" with
mainframes running Wall Street.
So at some point, someone decided that for System V,
the current system
would be released externally.
Rightâthat would have had to have been someone(s) in AT&T UNIX marketing in
North Carolinaâthe folks that gave us the "*Consider it Standard*" campaign.
I doubt we'll ever know the exact truth.
I agree. I take a WAG, though. I >>suspect<< it was linked to the
attempt to sell the 3B20S against the DEC Vax family and the then IBM model
140 (which was the "minicomputer" size IBM mainframe system). By that
time, System V was the OS Summit had supplied for it. If there were going
to be in the commercial hardware business, the OS SW had to match what the
HW used.
Clem
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