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I wouldn't say that Sun worked with AT&T for the altruistic reason of unifying the unices; the general opinion I've heard was that Sun went to SysV to avoid getting sued. See BSD#Net/2 and legal troubles. --moof 08:33, 21 February 2006 (UTC)
The following text is difficult to understand:
In 1993, AT&T sold Unix to Novell, who assigned trademark rights to X/Open. That same year, the major participants in UI and OSF formed the Common Open Software Environment (COSE) alliance, effectively marking the end of the most significant era of the Unix wars.
In 1996, X/Open and the OSF merged to form the Open Group. COSE work such as the Single UNIX Specification, which is now the standard for branded Unix, are now the responsibility of the Open Group.
It's not clear what happened to OSF after the formation of the COSE alliance. Was it the OSF that merged with X/Open, or was it actually COSE? --59.167.114.116 23:18, 7 August 2006 (UTC)
SunOS was based on BSD, but didn't Solaris 2 move to a SysV base? Therefore, shouldn't a dotted line be drawn to a separate tree on the SysV side? Or am I talking nonsense... It is 4:30am here. Alex 09:26, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
The graphic shows Linux (labelled 'GNU/Linux') in the same colour as the GNU Project. This suggests that Linux is part of the GNU Project or a descendant of it, which it not the case. The name 'GNU/Linux' is also out of place. According to sources cited in the 'GNU/Linux naming controversy' article, it is a rarely used term. It also, again, incorrectly suggests that Linux is part of GNU. In the main article on the Linux OS, it is referred to as 'Linux'. Faagel (talk) 23:35, 13 August 2012 (UTC)
This article mentions significant events then gives few details of those events then moves on to another event and repeats the same mistake for most of the article. I just thought i'd point that out. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 138.88.154.141 (talk) 20:04, 15 October 2008 (UTC)
Tru-64 UNIX, as run on the 64-bit DEC Alpha processor, is not included. I realize the processor was only made from about 1992 to a few years ago, but the o/s is relevant because at the time the processor came out, it was the fastest single chip out there because it ran 4 instructions per clock and had 90-100MHz clock speed to start. That advantage remained into the 2000's.
(side story: The Alpha, with blazing fast 64 bit math, made possible what some people called a 'desktop supercomputer', and soon became in huge demand, and so Intel was engaged for fabbing the Alpha in volume for DEC, and Intel stole some of the tech, which is why Pentiums suddenly increased in speed. DEC found out and sued Intel, and Intel paid a large penalty for that as well as making Alphas for DEC very cheaply to pay it off. The public benefit was a good improvement for Intel based PCs. just a footnote, as told by the late John Wisniewski of DEC, not so relevant to the UNIX article.) 208.190.133.202 (talk) 03:14, 27 March 2014 (UTC)
During BSD's period of legal turmoil (1992–94),[6] the nearly-complete GNU operating system was made operational by the inclusion of the Linux kernel and lumped together under the label "Linux".
I don't know who wrote this but s.he will probably have a rms ghost haunting his.her family for a dozens generations. --77.107.218.170 (talk) 15:08, 6 November 2019 (UTC)