From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: madcrow.maxwell@gmail.com (Michael Kerpan) Date: Tue, 28 Nov 2006 11:57:55 -0500 Subject: [TUHS] Open Sourcing IRIX? In-Reply-To: <8B9D43B4-BCF3-4768-98D3-E2D77248458E@vetsystems.com> References: <57FF0370-6EC5-4282-BCB2-06DD34C3C2B1@mac.com> <8dd2d95c0611270641v289bf26ag9bbd2b5310b9fc60@mail.gmail.com> <200611282012.58681.wes.parish@paradise.net.nz> <8dd2d95c0611280517y7644e8f5x9249b1861be6a161@mail.gmail.com> <8B9D43B4-BCF3-4768-98D3-E2D77248458E@vetsystems.com> Message-ID: <8dd2d95c0611280857i2dcda7b8gd23c213541e8c248@mail.gmail.com> Caldera changed very drastically as a company at the time it changed its name to SCO). Ancient Unix was opened up in January of 2002. In June of that year, the CEO of Caldera was forcibly replaced with an M$-backed anti-open source crusader. It was at that point that Caldera stopped selling its Linux distro, changed its name to SCO and started suing any company involved with Linux. On 11/28/06, Robert Tillyard wrote: > > On 28 Nov 2006, at 13:17, Michael Kerpan wrote: > > > That would never happen as it's SCO, not Novell, that owns System V > > and SCO is a M$-funded anti-open source crusader. > > Didn't SCO open up the early UNIX versions on TUHS now? and I thought > that previously Caldera had opened some old OSs like DR-DOS or CP-M. > > Regards, Rob. >