Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!wuarchive!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!hplabs!hpcc05!hpcuhb!hpda!hpcupt1!jamiller From: jamiller@hpcupt1.cup.hp.com (Jim Miller) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: long identifiers Message-ID: <5940045@hpcupt1.cup.hp.com> Date: 30 Oct 90 17:22:46 GMT References: <15953@csli.Stanford.EDU> Organization: Hewlett Packard, Cupertino Lines: 30 > As regards MS-DOS, you're right again, although >I might point out that UNIX makes for a more "portable" environment in >the qualitative sense (it runs on many different processors in systems >of many different sizes and configurations). > >-- Kev >---------- Ah, "qualitative"? Do you want it to run on the most MACHINES? MS-DOS Do you want it to run on the most SELLER'S machines? MS-DOS Do you want it to run on the most MANUFACTURER'S machines? MS-DOS Do you want it to run on the most different CPU (chip/CPU only, not including differences in mother boards)? UNIX Do you want it to run on the most wide range of mips? UNIX(?) Do you want it to run on a standard OS that all sellers agree on the implementation? MS-DOS (sorry I couldn't resist that last poke). I'm claiming you have picked a meaning of "qualitative" that is self serving. *I* never pick my definitions that way :-) jim - ok. ok. so it's a drift - miller jamiller@hpmpeb7.cup.hp.com (a.k.a James A. Miller; Jim the JAM; stupid; @!?$$!; ... ) Anything I say will be used against me ... But my company doesn't know or approve or condone anything of mine here.