Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!seismo!sundc!pitstop!sun!decwrl!nsc!voder!pyramid!wendyt From: wendyt@pyrps5 (Wendy Thrash) Newsgroups: comp.unix.aux Subject: Re: a/ux look-alikes etc (long) Message-ID: <37927@pyramid.pyramid.com> Date: 2 Sep 88 23:52:29 GMT Sender: daemon@pyramid.pyramid.com Reply-To: wendyt@pyrps5.UUCP (Wendy Thrash) Organization: Pyramid Technology Corp., Mountain View, CA Lines: 44 In article <16505@apple.Apple.COM> phil@apple.com.UUCP (Phil Ronzone) writes: I don't see a lot of comment by UniSoft folks on this question (except Fred Fish, of course, my predecessor as UniSoft's overworked compiler person), perhaps because they/we're all bound by nondisclosure. I believe I can sneak in a couple of comments legally, though. >Such things as autoconfiguration, autorecovery, true BSD 4.x networking . . . >all are Apple features. We thought of them, and we caused them to happen. Am I the only one who thinks of Miss Anne Elk while reading this? Certainly the presence of these features in A/UX was a decision made by Apple, and in that sense they're responsible. There seems, though, to be an implication that without Apple those things would never have found their way into UniPlus+. I'm inclined to believe that many of them were destined for inclusion anyway. Not all the things Phil mentioned are A/UX exclusives. From inside UniSoft, perhaps the most impressive piece of work on the Apple contract(s) was the effort that went into the documentation; Apple certainly deserves the credit for setting that project in motion. >UniSoft may have learned a lot from working with us . . . This is an amusing understatement. We all learned a great deal. Perhaps high-level managers learned about QA; the lessons learned by most of us were rather more interpersonal in nature. (I think all you ex-UniSoft folks out there know what I mean. :-) ) >UniSoft is very very good at getting a UNIX port up quickly on a strange >machine. UniSoft was very good at getting a UNIX port up quickly on a strange 68000-family machine. People there were good at dealing with strange MMUs. BTW, UniSoft has changed a great deal over just the last eight months; one should exercise some caution in making observations about how the company IS based on how it WAS. >UniSoft was a group of contractors to us, we paid them very well, gave each >UniSoft programmer who worked on the contract a Mac II, and thanked them. Would that it were so. Apple was quite generous with Mac IIs, but not everyone who worked on the contract ended up with one.