Newsgroups: comp.unix.sysv386 Path: utzoo!telly!evan From: evan@telly.on.ca (Evan Leibovitch) Subject: What's in a name? (was Re: wanted: UNIX or clone) Organization: Somewhere just far enough out of Toronto Date: Mon, 1 Apr 1991 14:47:22 GMT Message-ID: <1991Apr1.144722.1753@telly.on.ca> References: <1991Mar29.020148.24672@pegasus.com> In article <1991Mar29.020148.24672@pegasus.com> richard@pegasus.com (Richard Foulk) writes: >A number of vendors >use licensed AT&T code but are not allowed by AT&T to refer to their product >in the marketplace as "Unix". First off, nobody I know in this market uses the word "Unix". Everyone selling the product uses the all-caps version, "UNIX". I had been, er, "reprimanded" for my use of "Unix" in official capacities (hi, Peter :-). As for use of the name: I believe licencees must pay extra to use "UNIX" as their trade-name for the product. I believe that Interactive (386/ix) and ESIX have chosen to invent their own names, even tho' their products are both close to the current AT&T release. Both certainly use the term UNIX liberally in their advertising (as well they should!). I recall when Everex was struggling to make a unique name for its UNIX product, before coming up with ESIX (I still have a number of floppies, manuals, and paraphenelia marked ENIX). Before the final name was chosen in May 1989, a number of others (ENIX, EOS, OSIX) had been considered, but all conflicted with something else. Despite what seemed at the time to be an agonizing name search I remember that the whole exercize was considered by Everex to be more worthwhile (for a number of reasons) than merely calling their product UNIX. Dell, UHC, and Microport have chosen to pay the money and use the name UNIX, I believe. So has SCO, even though its UNIX is probably further from the original AT&T code than any of the others. This will certainly be the case when 486/ix and ESIX R4 start shipping. By the way: Is Interactive still going to call its Release 4 product "486/ix"? Is this not the stupidest, most confusing naming scheme in the market right now? -- Evan Leibovitch, Sound Software, located in beautiful Brampton, Ontario evan@telly.on.ca / uunet!attcan!telly!evan / (416) 452-0504 "Never will I succumb to the effects of bandwagonism" -- Dream Warriors