From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: robert@timetraveller.org (Robert Brockway) Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2018 10:06:58 +1000 (AEST) Subject: [TUHS] Windows roots and Unix influence (was Re: Happy birthday, Ken Thompson!) In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: On Sat, 3 Feb 2018, Dan Cross wrote: > Now days, I understand that one can run Linux binaries natively; the > Linux-compatibility subsystem will even `apt-get install` dependencies for > you. Satya Nadella's company isn't your father's Microsoft anymore. VSCode > (their new snazzy editor that apparently all the kids love) is Open Source. It's interesting that this hasn't taken off more. A year+ on and I hardly see anyone using it. > The speculation of, "what would have happened?" is interesting, though of > course unanswerable. I suspect that had it not been for Unix, we'd all be > running software that was closer to what you'd find on a mainframe or RT-11. This speaks to the "great man" theory of history. This posits that history would have been different if a great person had died before their moment in history. Eg, Winston Churchill was hit by a car when visiting New York City in the 1930s. He looked the wrong way before trying to cross the road. What if he had died? Would WW2 have turned out substantially differently? The alternative is to presume that a niche exists in to which a someone (or in this case an operating system) will step to become great. Using this alternative view, if Winston Churchill had died in the 1930s (or if UNIX had not been developed) an alternative would have filled that niche. Maybe we'd all be talking about TOPS20 now :) Rob