From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Thu, 21 Sep 1995 23:08:33 -0400 From: Jerry L. Pearson jpearson@handel.jlc.net Subject: SHADES OF ED WOOD Topicbox-Message-UUID: 25a72376-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19950922030833.3A4dpP4R8vzJBEYj1E3-Raju2rgMIb6KqGW7OZmVXBw@z> Short article for the interest of this group... -Industry Watch- section of HP Professional magazine... September 1995 issue, page 11, by George A. Thompson _SHADES OF ED WOOD_ "Did you ever think that UNIX might have been a technology left behind by extraterrestrial IS managers? Then get ready for Plan 9. In July, the Computer Research Center of AT&T Bell Laboratories announced the availability of Plan 9, an operating system named after the science-fiction cult movie _Plan 9 From Outer Space_. Plan 9 takes advantage of three basic technical ideas: all the system objects present themselves as named files that are manipulated by read/write operations; all these files may exist either locally or remotely and respond to a standard protocol; the file system name space (set of objects visible to a program) is dynamically and individually adjustable for each of the programs running on a particular machine. While the first two ideas have been foreshadowed in UNIX, the third is new. Although developed by the group that developed UNIX, C, and C++ (including Dennis Richie and Ken Thompson who developed UNIX in 1969), Plan 9 _is not a replacement for UNIX. It is a new design._ Plan 9 runs on the Intel 386/486/Pentium, MIPS and SPARC and Motorola 68020 platforms. It also supports symmetric multiprocessing. Plan 9 (entire source code; two volume manual) is available on CD-ROM for $350. Also included are four PC disks containing a binary-only version for demonstrations. For more information call (800) 462-8146 (in the United States) and (415) 943-4076 (outside the United States) On the WWW, use the URL http://plan9.att.com/index.html/ ."