From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: toby@telegraphics.com.au (Toby Thain) Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2017 12:41:07 -0500 Subject: [TUHS] Early Clones / Rewrites for TUHS archives In-Reply-To: <9B5822A8-8F46-4FC4-B12C-681CF0ACB362@quintile.net> References: <20171218101055.GA46385@server.rulingia.com> <20171218154638.GP11683@mcvoy.com> <9B5822A8-8F46-4FC4-B12C-681CF0ACB362@quintile.net> Message-ID: On 2017-12-18 12:35 PM, Steve Simon wrote: > > maybe i am wrong but i thought QNX was open source for a while, but then > it changed hands and the new owners “removed it from the internet”. > > interestingly if this is true its only the 2nd time i have heard of this > happening ever happening. the other one was years ago with the Khronos > dataflow signal processing system. What about Solaris. --T > > -Steve > > > On 18 Dec 2017, at 16:34, Andy Kosela > wrote: > >> >> >> On Monday, December 18, 2017, Henry Bent > > wrote: >> >> On 18 December 2017 at 10:46, Larry McVoy > > wrote: >> >> >> I think that it lives on in cars, someone told me that QNX is >> the basis >> for a lot of the car stuff.  Anyone know? >> >> >> Quite a few car systems, it seems: >> http://qnxauto.blogspot.ca/2015/06/the-to-z-of-qnx-in-cars.html >> >> >> >> I remember in the late 90s there was a demo of QNX running the whole >> OS with GUI including web browser etc. from 1.44MB floppy.  It was >> very fast too!  Too bad they never open sourced it. >> >> --Andy