Forgotten Systems!
UNIX being a good thing is commonly taken as axiomatic. I don't
particularly think it is; if anything, Unix's extreme minimalism
and inconsistent design was destructive to the work that was being
done in the 1960s and 1970s on advanced, feature-rich hardware and
operating systems oriented toward high-level languages and high
reliability. I'll probably expand this page at some point, but
this is a quick list of the ones that are important to me.
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--- Burroughs Large Systems ---
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The Burroughs B5000 was a high-level mainframe with tagged memory
and a pure HLL OS (there was literally no assembler on the
platform) in 1961. Buffer overflows were architecturally
impossible. Some design decisions have aged poorly - the decision
to make floating-point values the fundamental data type on the
system, for instance - but B5000 influenced all later descriptor
and capability systems. Burroughs Large Systems was a successful
family and is still in widespread use today, although Unisys moved
the product line to emulation in the mid 2010s.
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--- IBM S/38 and IBM i ---
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The S/38 and the (compatible) AS/400 that succeeded it have all
the guts of a well-designed object-oriented descriptor
architecture and are commercially successful, with over 100000
customer sites. A flat 128-bit persistent address space hosts a
sea of objects and a relational DB cleanly mapped on top of them.
Unfortunately, it has the mouthfeel of an IBM midrange OS and
largely exists to run RPG.
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--- 432 and BiiN ---
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Intel's iAPX 432 was an attempt to build a clean platform for
state-of-the-art object/capability software to run on.
Unfortunately it was fundamentally misdesigned, physically large,
lacked mature software, and was largely a flop out of the gate.
Thankfully, in a rare inverse example of the second-system effect,
it was followed up by the 960MX - a conservative cap extension on
Intel's well-regarded i960 RISC.
The system intended to run on the 960MX, BiiN and its OSIRIS OS,
was everything an advanced system should be - user-friendly,
approachable, and with a rich set of elegant object-oriented APIs.
It was also cancelled immediately before release, while largely
complete, due to a desire by Intel to cut their losses and return
to prioritizing their safely-profitable PC business.
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--- VOS ---
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Stratus's Multics-like fault-tolerant OS isn't an advanced work of
object-oriented art, but is something nice on its own: a better
general-purpose, "normal", server OS than UNIX. Its standard
library is an absolute pleasure to develop with, and the OS is
friendly and well-thought-out from top to bottom. I miss working
with it every time I have to write C on UNIX.
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