From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: pepe@naleco.com (Josh Good) Date: Sat, 11 Mar 2017 12:04:17 +0100 Subject: [TUHS] Linux displacing UnixWare on the PC architecture Message-ID: <20170311110417.GE27536@naleco.com> On 2017 Mar 9, 21:26, Josh Good wrote: > > And by the way, the two user limit in the "Personal Edition" of UnixWare > 2.1 seems to be real: > > $ telnet 172.27.101.128 > Trying 172.27.101.128... > Connected to 172.27.101.128. > Escape character is '^]'. > > > UnixWare 2.1 (gollum1) (pts/2) > > login: jgood > Password: > UnixWare 2.1 > gollum1 > Copyright 1996 The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. All Rights > Reserved. > Copyright 1984-1995 Novell, Inc. All Rights Reserved. > Copyright 1987, 1988 Microsoft Corp. All Rights Reserved. > U.S. Pat. No. 5,349,642 > Last login: Tue Mar 9 20:57:05 1999 on pts000 > telnetd: set_id() failed: Too many users > . > Connection closed by foreign host. > > > This thing was released in 1996. Obviously, with this limitation it could > not hold a candle to the emerging Linux tsunammi full of free source code. On the subject of Linux displacing UnixWare on the PC architecture in the mid-90's, I've found this most illuminating Usenet thread from 1994, whose participants include Alan Cox, Theo Tso, and some Novell Product Managers: http://tech-insider.org/linux/research/1994/1025.html And what came after that, as they say, is history. -- Josh Good