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March 18th, 2004, 11:04 PM
#1
Unix
Could any one please tell me From where can I get UNIX operating system. I want to install it in my PC for programming purpose.
My PC has
Intel P4 1.6GHz processor
Intel 850MV MotherBoard and
128 MB RAM.
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March 18th, 2004, 11:06 PM
#2
When you say UNIX, I assume you mean *nix? www.linuxiso.org (it is, like one of the first results on google).
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March 18th, 2004, 11:39 PM
#3
No. I dont mean Linux or BSD.
I mean UNIX by Bell Labs.
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March 19th, 2004, 12:14 AM
#4
I don't think you can get it for free. All Unix required paid license and they are usually customized for processor other than Intel.
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March 19th, 2004, 03:16 AM
#5
If U are intereseted in learning programming (and/or working in environment) for UNIX-like systems, U may take some free OS, like Linux or FreeBSD. They are mostly common in what concerns of programming stuff (at least user space programs (not drivers)), but that will be enough for U, though.
Bell Labs ended to maintain its Unix version long time ago. What U've meant is Unix System V. It doesn't produce it any more. It sold their buiseness to Novel, then Novel sold smth partially to f***ing SCO. And now we have that noise from SCO, that that code has been used in Linux. .. money and advocates...
Nowadays UNIX is considered to be just a class of OS's.
Just for having fun, follow this link. This's a history tree of Unix :
http://www.levenez.com/unix/
"UNIX is simple; it just takes a genius to understand its simplicity!"
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March 19th, 2004, 09:00 AM
#6
Originally posted by Kheun
I don't think you can get it for free. All Unix required paid license...
Didn't SCO publish UNIX under GPL?
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March 19th, 2004, 09:18 AM
#7
Originally posted by treuss
Didn't SCO publish UNIX under GPL?
Well, these are commercial unices. As I guess, amongst all unix-like OSes, only Linux uses GPL. FreeBSD (NetBSD, OpenBSD) use their own open licensies.
I donot know many details about the deal between Novel and SCO (that seems that nobody knows, even they are ). But now Novel claims that it had sold their buisness to SCO, but that didn't include the rights on sources. In any case, these claims from SCO are stupid now. There were lots of funny cases when they were trying to show some parts of "stollen" code.
Oh... I guess for completing the current picture, Fortran creators should patent some of programming languages statements like cicles, if-statements, etc... that'll be funny
"UNIX is simple; it just takes a genius to understand its simplicity!"
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