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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!network.ucsd.edu!ucsbcsl!engrhub.ucsb.edu
- From: harley@engrhub.ucsb.edu (Harley Hahn)
- Newsgroups: comp.unix.questions
- Subject: IS UNIX DEAD? (16)
- Message-ID: <6847@ucsbcsl.ucsb.edu>
- Date: 23 Nov 92 20:04:11 GMT
- Sender: root@ucsbcsl.ucsb.edu
- Lines: 44
-
- This is number 16 in a series of 22 responses to the question:
-
- What do you think about the Byte magazine cover that asked:
- IS UNIX DEAD?
-
- (moderated by Harley Hahn)
-
- ----------
- From: gator.rn.com!bluemoon!cmcurtin@homebase.vistachrome.com C.
- Matthew Curtin, President, Goffer Development, Columbus, OH
-
- The headline "Is Unix dead?", while having its intended effect -
- to sell magazines - was, IMHO, a bit irresponsible on the part of
- a computer magazine. I also found the article to be very slighted
- against Unix, its predictions for market share and such are
- absurd.
-
- Consider the following: Unix (in some form) runs on practically
- every computer from my Apple IIGS to Amdahl mainframes,
- supporting almost seamless source-level (and, in some cases,
- binary) compatibility among its versions.
-
- There are 15 commercial versions of Unix for the 80x86-based PC
- alone. Unix is "tried and true," having existed as we know it
- since 1973. The trend in the computer industry is, without a
- doubt, toward "open systems," which we all know, is really a
- euphemism for "Unix;" few companies are really interested in
- placing their heavy computer investments in the hands of a single
- vendor in the form of [closed, proprietary,
- insert-favorite-word-here] machines.
-
- Even IBM, which has been advocating its closed boxes (System
- 30x0, System/3x, AS/400) for years, is running Unix now (AIX,
- RS/6000) as a way to keep up with what the industry really wants.
-
- Byte magazine is heavily biased in favor of MS-DOS (or OS/2 or
- Windows)- based PCs over other architectures. The majority of my
- colleagues who are not brainwashed into the standard PC mentality
- do not place high stock in the opinions of Byte magazine, opting
- instead, for publications like UnixWorld, that more objectively
- cover "Open Systems."
-
- ==========
-
-