You remember correctly:

'If 386BSD had been available when I started on Linux, Linux would probably never had happened.'
http://gondwanaland.com/meta/history/interview.html


On Sun, Jan 8, 2017, at 08:28 AM, Angus Robinson wrote:
I think at one point Linus said that if he had known or if 386bsd was available he would not have started Linux 

(If I remember correctly)

On 6 Jan 2017 05:57, "Dan Cross" <crossd@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 12:08 PM, Clem Cole <clemc@ccc.com> wrote:
On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 11:17 AM, ron minnich <rminnich@gmail.com> wrote:
Larry, had Sun open sourced SunOS, as you fought so hard to make happen, Linux might not have happened as it did. SunOS was really good. Chalk up another win for ATT!


FWIW:  I disagree.  For details look at my discussion of  rewriting Linux in RUST  on quora.   But a quick point is this .... Linux original took off (and was successful) not because of GPL, but in spite of it and later the GPL would help it.  But it was not the GPL per say that made Linux vs BSD vs SunOS et al.

What made Linux happen was the BSDi/UCB vs AT&T case.      At the time, a lot of hackers (myself included) thought the case was about copyright.   It was not, it was about trade secret and the ideas around UNIX.   i.e. folks like, we "mentally contaminated" with the AT&T Intellectual Property.

When the case came, folks like me that were running 386BSD which would later begat FreeBSD et al, got scared.   At that time, *BSD (and SunOS) were much farther along in the development and stability.   But .... may of us hought Linux would insulate us from losing UNIX on cheap HW because their was not AT&T copyrighted code in it.    Sadly, the truth is that if AT&T had won the case, all UNIX-like systems would have had to be removed from the market in the USA and EU [NATO-allies for sure].

That said, the fact the *BSD and Linux were in the wild, would have made it hard to enforce and at a "Free" (as in beer) price it may have been hard to make it stick.    But that it was a misunderstanding of legal thing that made Linux "valuable"  to us, not the implementation.

If SunOS has been available, it would not have been any different.  It would have been thought of based on the AT&T IP, but trade secret and original copyright.

Yes, it seems in retrospect that USL v BSDi basically killed Unix (in the sense that Linux is not a blood-relative of Unix). I remember someone quipping towards the late 90s, "the Unix wars are over. Linux won."

Perhaps an interesting area of speculation is, "what would the world have looked like if USL v BSDi hadn't happened *and* SunOS was opened to the world?" I think in that parallel universe, Linux wouldn't have made it particularly far: absent the legal angle, what would the incentive had been to work on something that was striving to basically be Unix, when really good Unix was already available?

Ah well.

        - Dan C.


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