we pretty much bounced a UNISYS library information system on using
',' (comma) as the separator on IPv4 dotted-quads. If there isn't a
dot, how can it be one?
I think the OS I used with a cd command which could walk down, but
walking "up" was a cd to root and a walk down -1 also fell out of
favour.
The only thing I remember doing on the apollo domain workstations was
tuning their sendmail config. nobody ran commands on it, nobody could
reliably compile.
HP and its HP compatibility library. and the really badly written BSD
compatibility layer.
oddly, OSF/1 and RS/6000 AIX both survived. maybe you can have enough
lipstick on a pig. reboot to re-apply bindings. well i *guess* that
works, but gee, was it really so hard to move shared library through
some staging process? and having to boot into a mini OS to do
filesystem repairs. please.
none of these things were fatal but somehow all of these things were.
On Tue, Aug 28, 2018 at 4:02 PM <arnold(a)skeeve.com> wrote:
Larry McVoy <lm(a)mcvoy.com> wrote:
Decades have gone by, Sun is gone, and they are
still cleaning [sic] to the
compatibilty argument for /usr/bin?
As hard as it is to believe in this day and age, there are still plenty
of places where that compatibility is what sells systems.
SunOS was the system that everyone used because
they wanted to, Solaris
was what people used because they had to.
Nicely put!
Arnold