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- From: bgm@cray.com (Bert Moshier)
- Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.misc
- Subject: OS/2 through 1999
- Message-ID: <1992Aug29.223902.3961@hemlock.cray.com>
- Date: 30 Aug 92 03:39:02 GMT
- Organization: Cray Research, Inc.
- Lines: 112
-
- Everyone / Anyone:
-
- IBM sent two "pros from Dover" (to use a MASH the movie term) to the last
- MN OS/2 End-user Group meeting. The topic was the future of OS/2. They
- covered this topic very well with great details when ask and lightly when
- not asked.
-
- I plan on writing a Watching OS/2 column (OS/2 Monthly Magazine) based upon
- the information presented.
-
- They covered the future of OS/2 through 1999. They provided details with dates
- through 1994 and a projected time line between 1995 and 1999.
-
- The highlights are: (note the items on: Alpha chip, C2 Security exists today
- for OS/2 2.0, the OS/2 shrinkwrap ship rate, AND ASYNC support for almost
- everything including REMOTE PM and remote updates):
-
- - AIX and OS/2 are receiving and will continue to receive technology
- from Taligent. Talegent licenses in and licenses out
- technology, and uses this technology to create Pink.
-
- IBM's goal with the Apple, IBM and Motarola(sic) alliance is to
- create the defacto standard in RISC chips and Object Oriented
- support (DOE, operating system, etc.) The chart showed this
- occuring for the OO technology slowly (1992-94), picking up steam
- (1995-96), and in full swing (1997-99). The chart did not show
- the RISC chip acceptance plan.
-
- The first Taligent operating system will come out 1995 and will
- be for very high-end machines. Since AIX and OS/2 will have the
- Taligent OO technology, there won't be a pressing business case
- for end-users to go to Pink immediately.
-
- The alliance doesn't want another OS/2 1.x to occur. By providing
- AIX and OS/2 OO technology the alliance will get existing
- applications to move towards Pink at a rate acceptable to end-users.
- Pink will support existing technology so existing applications will
- have a binary level migration path.
-
- - IBM has OS/2 running on the alpha chip today. To quote one
- presenter ("very nicely, thank you.")
-
- - IBM will have all its DCE products available in 1994. The first
- toolkits will appear starting in December 1992.
-
- - All IBM products by the end of 1994 will be DCE aware. I asked
- about this from several directions. The answer came back that
- yes, this included existing and future IBM applications/products.
-
- Aware means they will exploit DCE if the user installed it. For
- example PMTape, the Workplace Shell, etc., will be DCE aware.
-
- While this might be wrong, I got the impression that DCE will be
- shipping with IBM operating systems. One can optionally install
- it or ignore it.
-
- - I asked about the two side issue of DCE applications. Its nice if
- the product uses DCE but something on another computer needs to
- exist. They said that their mainframes (existing operating system)
- will provide the other side.
-
- I asked if other manufacturers could participate in this split up
- of their products. They said yes, there would be a released standard.
- They would not provide specifics.
-
- - OS/2 has (through a PRPQ) B1 security (uncertified) today. Basically,
- IBM is taking the VM approach. The operating system has security
- exits that IBM or another vendor can use. The end-user can run with
- dummy exits (no security and the default) or any security system
- of their choice.
-
- IBM's OS/2 PRPQ is RACF. It will stay a separate product till after
- 9/93 (when the Microsoft/IBM agreement on code ownership ends). IBM
- will release OS/2 with RACF (optionally installed) fourth quarter
- 1993. They will begin the certification process (for C2 first and
- then higher) at that time. They expect to have OS/2 certified in
- 1994.
-
- - IBM system management plans include the ability for desktop
- machines to automatically update themselves when a server change
- occurs. Plans include support for DME and Netview for administrators.
-
- Additionally, machines (eg: laptops) can update through Async
- modems.
-
- IBM will be announcing CID (Configuration, Installation and
- Distribution). CID provides a common end-user interface for
- all IBM and ISV products on OS/2 (possibly AIX). Once the end-user
- knows CID, (s)he knows how to install and configure all applications.
-
- - IBM will be providing at no charge with all OS/2 communications
- products, NTS/2 (Network Transport Services/2). This product
- contains the SNA, TCP/IP, OSI (X.25), Apple Talk, NETBIOS, 802.3,
- POPS, IXP, and DECNET drivers for OS/2.
-
- - IBM plans on fully supporting Async modems. This includes DCE, DME,
- Remote PM (which includes X-Windows client/server support), DOE, etc.
-
- - While I don't understand how the alliance will do it, the Taligent
- techology calls for a binary compatibility layer. Three components
- will allow this -- API, a source library, and an object oriented
- subsystem. The BCL will allow an application (compiled once!) to
- run on portable OS/2, System 7, Pink, and AIX.
-
- - An interesting note, the ratio of PC-DOS sold .vs. IBM machines
- shipped is 1.22. This meanss people are using PC-DOS on clones.
- The ratio is going up monthly.
-
- - OS/2 2.0 sold 300,000 copies in the last 10 days. If this continues,
- it has a daily ship rate of 30,000 copies.
-
- Bert.
-