Mei culpa/my apologies -- I left out the ISC part of the story and I was not trying to rewrite history in any way.   In fact, to the rest of the list, ISC did the first 386 port of UNIX - which for UNIX history is extremely significant.  One of my favorite pieces of salesmanship - Heinz, Peter, and Phil Shevrin managed to convince both AT&T and Intel to separately pay for the 386 port (and I thought IBM was in that mix somehow too).  Then ISC brought it out as a separate product that I think Sun ended up with at some later time yet.  If I recall, ISC did the original work on the RT (which redates the RS/6000) and the ISC folks had their own product for VM before IBM released AIX/370 as a product.   Heinz and Charlie would know more details on those ports.

That said, the comment that I was originally replying to was about IBM getting interested in BSD UNIX and my point was simply, AIX/370 was BSD-based and was shipping as an IBM product years before Linus even started working on what would become Linux for his 386 based machine; much less any attempt to get it running on the 370.

Also, if we are to be complete.  Tom Lyons did the original 360/370 C/UNIX work at Princeton & AT&T long before any of that, starting in the mid-1970s but I'll let Tom fill you in there.

On Fri, Apr 2, 2021 at 12:40 PM Heinz Lycklama <heinz@osta.com> wrote:
The first version of AIX for the IBM RT PC was developed by INTERACTIVE Systems Corp.
under contract to IBM. The second version of AIX was developed by Locus Computing.
Some brief history can be found here:
    1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interactive_Systems_Corporation
    2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_AIX#IBM_RT_PC

Heinz