Newsgroups: comp.unix.sysv386
Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!turnkey!jackv
From: jackv@turnkey.tcc.com (Jack F. Vogel)
Subject: Re: wanted: UNIX or clone
Message-ID: <1991Mar27.192257.21635@turnkey.tcc.com>
Reply-To: jackv@turnkey.TCC.COM (Jack F. Vogel)
Organization: Turnkey Computer Consultants, Westchester, CA
References: <1991Mar21.175359.15633@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> <9103232223.30@rmkhome.UUCP> <450@jgaltstl.UUCP>
Date: Wed, 27 Mar 91 19:22:57 GMT

In article <450@jgaltstl.UUCP> terry@jgaltstl.UUCP (terry linhardt) writes:
>
>Which provokes the question.........just *what* is UNIX? Is it
>SVID? Is it really a philosophy? Can someone say that AIX, for
>instance, is 'UNIX', since some would argue it is really a
>proprietary OS based upon an 'old' version of 'UNIX'. If Coherent
>is *not* UNIX, as you imply, then what is UNIX?
 
No big mystery, UNIX is a not some philosophical notion or abstraction. It
is a licensed product of AT&T. You want to know if something is UNIX, well
does it require a license from AT&T, does AIX...yes, does Xenix...yes, does
4.3BSD...yes. Now what about Minix or Coherent...I'm sure you can answer
that. Of course, the above mentioned operating systems may offer appreciable
original code, but if they are using AT&T code they require the license, be
it SVr2, SVr3 or whatever. Furthermore, the name "UNIX" is a registered
trademark of AT&T. Philosophy and its abstractions...BAH!!


-- 
Jack F. Vogel			jackv@locus.com
AIX370 Technical Support	       - or -
Locus Computing Corp.		jackv@turnkey.TCC.COM
