One thing I'd like to see saved for the historical value is Pyramid OS/x.
It was one of those things I'd have liked to see the internals of -- but I
wasn't supposed to have that level accesss in Ed Services.
It is an interesting mix of both the SysV and BSD environments and it's a
shame it's probably completely gone now.
I think the last work on it may have been at Siemens, since I think the
last bit of Pyramid that was left was rumored to
go to SVR4 (I was there for the DC/OSx transition -- I worked on the
courseware fixes and beta testing).
I heard from a friend that they may have gone to Solaris before the end
hit. I think they were swallowed by Fujitsu.
Amazingly, I heard some of my SVR4 courseware stuff ended up in
illustrations used in Solaris courseware. My name was in the illustration
of the password file. A trainer hired at least 5 years after me went to
Sun and I hear some of my stuff went along for the ride.
I long wished they had done the full Linux dual universe thing on a *BSD
varient.
I'd be running FreeBSD on my desktop if I could just watch Netflix with
it. Linux, Windows and MacOS have enough pull for Google to port their
Widevine
Bill
--
d|i|g|i|t|a|l had it THEN. Don't you wish you could still buy it now!
On Tue, Sep 04, 2018 at 01:58:04PM -0400, Noel Chiappa
wrote:
True; but if all the copies of a particular item
are discarded, one can
make
all the lawyers on the planet as happy as clams,
and it won't do a bit of
good. Save the bits, _then_ work out the legal issues, is my thinking on
priorities.
I'll also follow up on Henry and Noel's e-mail w.r.t the Unix Archive that
TUHS provides. The only files in the public archive are ones where the
legal
issues have been resolved. I also keep a hidden archive of files where the
legal issues have not been resolved.
As always, if you would like me to keep an off-site backup of your Unix
bits, the hidden Unix archive is write-only. Save the bits, and also
be mindful of the legal issues.
Cheers, Warren