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- Newsgroups: comp.lang.c++,comp.lang.c,comp.object,comp.software-eng
- Path: mercury.hsi.com!news
- From: marksc@wpmail.code3.com (Mark A. Scarton)
- Subject: Re: Portability of code & skills (Beware of "C" Hackers etc)
- Message-ID: <3152d33b.1539433@mercury.hsi.com>
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- Organization: 3M Health Information Systems
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- References: <4ikb6kINN1is@mayne.ugrad.cs.ubc.ca> <DoI5Ao.AyJ@assip.csasyd.oz> <EJH.96Mar19163745@larry.gsfc.nasa.gov> <3150415E.6396@sdt.com> <4ip5om$s9@bughouse.imonics.com>
- Date: Fri, 22 Mar 1996 16:23:28 GMT
-
- rcook@imonics.com (Imonics Corporation) wrote:
-
- >In article <3150415E.6396@sdt.com>, Larry Baker <leb@sdt.com> wrote:
- >>UNIX was never free. AT&T charged something like $50,000 (don't
- >>quote me) for a full UNIX source license to corporations in the
- >>70's and early 80's, though they may have given it away to
- >>Universities.
- >
- >AT&T was forbidden to sell the software until phone co.
- >deregulation. It was "free" (you paid for your own tape) if you
- >were an educational institution. That was the only way anyone
- >could get it. It was not for sale.
-
- Wrong. From 1981-5 I worked for a company in Boston MA that produced Unix ports
- to other (new) architectures. We also encapsulated parts of the Unix kernel for
- use in embedded systems. We licensed the source from AT&T by class of machine.
- If memory serves, we paid something like $20k for the source for PDP 11/2x
- through 11/4x systems.
-
- They may not have been able to mass market their "product", but they certainly
- did license the "trade secret" source to industry for a fee.
-
- Mark A. Scarton, ABD
- CompUtah!, Park City, Utah USA
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