Interactive Systems. Now there’s a name I’ve not heard in many a year. Heinz Lycklama
went there.
The did a couple of things, a straight UNIX port to various things (PDP-11, 386) and also
there “UNIX running under VMS” product.
They also had their own version of the Rand Editor called “INed” that was happiest on this
hacked version of a Perkin Elmer terminal.
Early versions were PWB UNIX based if I recall.
My first job out of college was working with IS Unix on an 11/70 playing configuration
management (essentially all the PWB stuff). I also hacked the line printer spooler and
the .mm macro package to do classification markings (this was a part of a government
contract).
A few years later I was given the job of porting Interactive Systems UNIX that was already
running on an i386 (an Intel 310 system which had a Multibus I) to an Intel Multibus II
box. Intel had already ported it once, but nobody seemed to be able to find the source
code. So with a fresh set of the source code for the old system from IS, I proceeded to
reverse engineer/port the code to the Message Passing Coprocessor. (Intel was not real
forthcoming for documentation for that either). Eventually, I got it to work (the
Multibus II really was a pleasant bus and worked well with UNIX). I went on to write
drivers for a 9-track tape drive (which sat in my living room for a long time), a Matrox
multibus II framebuffer (OK, that had problems), and a SCSI host adapter that was talking
to this kludge device that captured digital data from a FLIR on uMatic cassettes (but
that’s a different story).