Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!watmath!clyde!burl!ulysses!bellcore!decvax!decwrl!sun!hoptoad!jim From: jim@hoptoad.UUCP Newsgroups: net.unix,net.micro Subject: Dirt-Cheap UNIX ($389.95) for the IBM PC/AT (and clones) Message-ID: <711@hoptoad.uucp> Date: Sun, 20-Apr-86 15:30:26 EST Article-I.D.: hoptoad.711 Posted: Sun Apr 20 15:30:26 1986 Date-Received: Wed, 23-Apr-86 12:00:46 EST Organization: Nebula Consultants in San Francisco Lines: 52 Keywords: cheap UNIX IBM PC (and clones) Xref: watmath net.unix:7680 net.micro:14403 Low-cost UNIX has at last arrived! It is Microport's System V.2 for the IBM PC/AT. I have had my hands on a ver- sion of the system and it IS UNIX, though Berkeley desiderata such as C-shell, script, more (etc) are not there yet. The only thing I found broken was shell layering, which I think is vastly inferior to BSD job control anyway. Even so, there are up to four windows that can be selected, tasks started, and left to run. Microport advertises up to eight users, and I believe it if the PC clone has a fast disk and several meg of memory. The clone I tried gave me results from a "ps -ef" command almost as soon as I pressed RETURN. What is exciting about the Microport UNIX is its pricing schedule: Runtime System $159.95 Software Development System $139.95 Text Preparation System $159.95 Complete System Package $389.95 Berkeley Enhancements $99.95 Complete System, 3-8 users $454.95 These prices require a little decoding. "Runtime System" means the System V.2 shell (with functions), the utilities, but no compilers or n/troff. "Software Development System" includes C, F77, SCCS, make, and other goodies. "Text Preparation System" includes complete System V Release 2 DWB, though the drivers for ditroff are only the standard ones from Bell. Real UNIX comes in two flavors, the 1-2 user version for $389.95 and the 1-8 user version for $454.95. Rich Morin and I walked around the booths at the recent West Coast Computer Faire and calculated that a complete UNIX system with 40MB disk and 1MB RAM would have cost $2,600. That's putting UNIX within reach of a credit card purchase. I'm excited enough about Microport's UNIX that I am considering carrying the product in my Bookstore. The only really negative thing about the package is that the manuals are in the small format, and the type is really too small to read comfortably-- or is that a statement about my being 44? I believe that dirt-cheap UNIX is here, and that this is only the beginning. Unfortunately, the ad in last Sunday's "San Jose Mercury" for UNIX and C tech writers at Commodore-Amiga did not mean that they have wised up and ported UNIX to the Amiga, according to the manager I chatted up on the phone. Too bad. AT&T: (415) 626-7581 Snail: c/o Jim Joyce's UNIX Bookstore, 47 Potomac St, SF 94117