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10 Unix


Ever since Unix got popular in the 1980s, there has been an ongoing effort
on the part of the Unix vendors to “standardize” the operating system.
Although it often seems that this effort plays itself out in press releases and
not on programmers’ screens, Unix giants like Sun, IBM, HP, and DEC
have in fact thrown millions of dollars at the problem—a problem largely
of their own making.

Why Unix Vendors Really Don’t Want a Standard Unix
The push for a unified Unix has come largely from customers who see the
plethora of Unixes, find it all too complicated, and end up buying a PC
clone and running Microsoft Windows. Sure, customers would rather buy a
similarly priced workstation and run a “real” operating system (which they
have been deluded into believing means Unix), but there is always the risk
that the critical applications the customer needs won’t be supported on the
particular flavor of Unix that the customer has purchased.

The second reason that customers want compatible versions of Unix is that
they mistakenly believe that software compatibility will force hardware
vendors to compete on price and performance, eventually resulting in
lower workstation prices.

Of course, both of these reasons are the very same reasons that workstation
companies like Sun, IBM, HP, and DEC really don’t want a unified version
of Unix. If every Sun, IBM, HP, and DEC workstation runs the same soft-
ware, then a company that has already made a $3 million commitment to
Sun would have no reason to stay with Sun’s product line: that mythical
company could just as well go out and purchase a block of HP or DEC
workstations if one of those companies should offer a better price.

It’s all kind of ironic. One of the reasons that these customers turn to Unix
is the promise of “open systems” that they can use to replace their propri-
etary mainframes and minis. Yet, in the final analysis, switching to Unix
has simply meant moving to a new proprietary system—a system that hap-
pens to be a proprietary version of Unix.
Date: Wed, 20 Nov 91 09:37:23 PST
From: [email protected]
To: UNIX-HATERS
Subject: Unix names

Perhaps keeping track of the different names for various versions of
Unix is not a problem for most people, but today the copy editor here
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