From: “Perry E. Metzger” <perry@piermont.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 96fc0237a3bad73ca655829b92ae64fef1bbf892ef313e835c5db8ad07e7e80d
Message ID: <199511011651.LAA02027@jekyll.piermont.com>
Reply To: <199511010122.CAA29490@utopia.hacktic.nl>
UTC Datetime: 1995-11-01 16:51:42 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 1 Nov 95 08:51:42 PST
From: "Perry E. Metzger" <perry@piermont.com>
Date: Wed, 1 Nov 95 08:51:42 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: IBM's Microkernal
In-Reply-To: <199511010122.CAA29490@utopia.hacktic.nl>
Message-ID: <199511011651.LAA02027@jekyll.piermont.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Mr. Anonymous:
Why is this being sent to cypherpunks? Its totally irrelevant.
.pm
Anonymous writes:
> The Wall Street Journal, October 31, 1995, p. B6.
>
>
> IBM Announces New Software Code That Is Universal
>
> By Laurie Hays
>
>
> International Business Machines Corp., in its effort to reduce
> the importance of computer-operating systems, announced a new
> kind of universal-software code called Microkernal that
> enables software to work on incompatible hardware.
>
> For software developers and businesses that want to develop
> one set of codes to run applications on many different
> machines, Microkernal offers an opportunity for the
> long-touted open computing. A big challenge remains, however:
> to market the technology and make a business case for software
> developers to write for Microkernal in a world that is
> dominated by Intel Corp. and Microsoft Corp.
>
> "It's exciting technology, but it will be hard for them to
> market," says Dan Kuznetsky, an analyst with International
> Data Corp., a Framingham, Mass., market-research firm. "It's
> also got a long way to go from what they've announced to the
> future."
>
> Mr. Kuznetsky likens the technology to the development of a
> great automobile transmission that has yet to be turned into
> a truck or a car.
>
> The key to Microkernal is a single source code base that
> communicates between the hardware and the operating system.
> One long-term possibility, for example, would be to make the
> Apple Computer Inc.'s Maclntosh operating system work on an
> Intel PC, impossible today because the two have different
> design architectures that don't talk to each other.
>
> IBM's delayed OS/2 operating system for the PowerPC chip,
> which is expected to be shipped by the end of the year, will
> be the first IBM offering for the Microkernal allowing
> developers to move applications to the chip with only small
> changes.
>
> IBM so far has garnered a number of licensing agreements for
> Microkernal, including Digital Equipment Corp., Maynard,
> Mass., and LG Electronics, formerly the Korean electronics
> concern Goldstar, as well as a number of universities.
>
> -----
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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