The article says is *"REVIEW: Was Onyx the first UNIX vendor on micro
hardware? MARSH: I think so. I signed the distribution license in November
of 1979."*
By then, Al Arms (who ran Patent and Licensing of UNIX for AT&T) knew
numerous of the commercial licensees wanted something better than the
current "second CPU" license, plus many wanted binary redistribution
rights. As I said, it is quite possible that Onyx signed the original V7
redistribution license first, but it was offered to many of us. I also
pointed out that many of us pushed back and that there was
great unhappiness with the terms that AT&T had offered. This is why we got
together as a group to negotiate something. - which would later become the
System III license. This contrasts with Al and the team coming up with
something like they did with the V7 redistribution license.
ᐧ
On Wed, Jun 26, 2024 at 4:42 AM Al Kossow <aek(a)bitsavers.org> wrote:
On 6/19/24 9:44 AM, Clem Cole wrote:
On Wed, Jun 19, 2024 at 12:00 PM Al Kossow <aek(a)bitsavers.org <mailto:
aek(a)bitsavers.org>> wrote:
On 6/19/24 8:47 AM, Clem Cole wrote:
> 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.
Is the really early history of Unix licensing documented anywhere?
Not to my knowledge -- I probably know much/most of it as I lived it as
part of a
couple of the negotiation teams.
The work on reviving a Plexus P20 prompted me to put up the history
of Onyx
and Plexus at
http://bitsavers.org/pdf/plexus/history> and a long time ago someone who
worked at Fortune
told me we can all thank Onyx in 1980 for
working out the single
machine licensing withAT&T
Hmm, I'm not sure —but I don't think it is wholly clear—although Onyx
was early and certainly would have been a part. They were not the only
firm that wanted redistribution rights.
Numerous vendors asked for the V7 redistribution license, with HP (Fred
Clegg),
Microsoft (Bob Greenberg/Bill Gates), and Tektronix (me)
being three, I am aware. It is quite possible
Onyx signed the original
V7 license first, but I know there was great unhappiness
with the
terms that AT&T initially set up. When the
folks from AT&T Patents and
Licensing (Al Arms at that point) talked to us
individually, it was
sort of "this is what we are offering"
- mind you, this all started
pre-Judge Green<< and the concept of
negotiation was
somewhat one-sided as AT&T was not allowed in the computer
business.
An interview with Bob Marsh where he claims Onyx had the first license in
Nov 1979 (pg 40)
http://bitsavers.org/pdf/plexus/history/Bob_Marsh_Interview_198412.pdf