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- Newsgroups: comp.lang.c++
- Path: sparky!uunet!mole-end!mat
- From: mat@mole-end.matawan.nj.us
- Subject: Re: How to hack c++ into doing late binding ?
- Message-ID: <1992Sep1.091641.10816@mole-end.matawan.nj.us>
- Summary: Decency and Mach 3
- Organization: :
- References: <2A827DFD.6D68@tct.com> <1992Aug10.191631.4133@microsoft.com> <TMB.92Aug31191017@arolla.idiap.ch>
- Date: Tue, 1 Sep 1992 09:16:41 GMT
- Lines: 21
-
- In article <TMB.92Aug31191017@arolla.idiap.ch>, tmb@arolla.idiap.ch (Thomas M. Breuel) writes:
- > In article <1992Aug13.151003.15231@ucc.su.OZ.AU> maxtal@extro.ucc.su.OZ.AU (John MAX Skaller) writes:
-
- > What you need to do 'dynamic linkage' is a decent operating system.
- > Windows and OS/2 do exactly what you want. I do it, it
- > works superbly. So your problem is that Unix is a brain dead
- > operating system :-)
- ...
- > It's easy to claim to "standardize" lots of features (Windows, OS/2)
- > if you only have one system running on only one hardware platform...
-
- And to get out of that one-platform problem, you have to go back to
- being an operating system rather than simply a graphical user shell.
- IBM recently announced that their next OS/2 will be based on the Mach
- `microkernel.' I believe that a `version 3' appeared in the article,
- which was in last week's Computerworld.
- --
- (This man's opinions are his own.)
- From mole-end Mark Terribile
-
- mat@mole-end.matawan.nj.us, Somewhere in Matawan, NJ
-