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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] [OT] Say _no_ to the Microsoft Office format as an ISO standard
- Date: Tue, 24 Jul 2007 17:05:03 +0900 (JST)
- From: Curt Sampson <cjs@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] [OT] Say _no_ to the Microsoft Office format as an ISO standard
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On Tue, 24 Jul 2007, Stephen J. Turnbull wrote:
I don't think the BSD stack had that much to do with spiking BitNET, ChaosNET, DECNet, and so on.
I'd say that they were all pretty much dead, anyway. Not being available on microcomputers in a practical way by 1995 pretty much took you out of the competition.
I'm not even sure it really had that much to do with spiking NetBIOS and AppleTalk.
NetBIOS is a different layer; it was rapidly ported to run of TCP/IP, and that pretty much became the default configuration, since everybody wanted TCP/IP up and running to browse the web and collect mail from their ISP, anyway.
As for AppleTalk: you tell me what Apple currently recommends you use instead of it. :-) (Though that one took a while, I'll admit, mostly due to missing features in the IP protocols.)
IPX failed as much technically as for any other reason: their internetworking just wasn't suited to large internetworks; you can stretch stuff designed for fast local LANs just so far.
I think that the growth of the Internet was really very much about the "best current practice" approach that the IETF has always taken to standards.
That made it work, but I'll argue that it didn't make it popular. What did was:
But the availability of the BSD stack definitely made Microsoft's (and others') decision to support TCP/IP a no-brainer...
Think about it. You're a vendor of some sort of network system, with your own semi-proprietary protocol (though Cisco supports it, of course), it's 1996, and you're faced with updating your network stack once again, and dealing with all those driver installation issues too. Then you realize that since last November, 90% of all of the new microcomputers that will be installed from now on will have a well-supported TCP/IP stack built in. What are you going to do? You wouldn't even need free code for the stack available, by that point; the advantage of chopping out a whole lower slice of the protocol stack, and one of the most painful parts to install, would be enough to make you do whatever you could to get your stuff working, by hook or by crook, over TCP/IP.
> It's interesting to think that had that stack been GPL'd, Stallman might > still be distributing gcc via magtapes through the mail today.
<shiver mode="uncontrollable">
Well, my point was, it certainly would have rather blunted the success of the whole Gnu project. Basically, it was non-GPL'd software that gave him the distribution and collaboration system he needed to have Gnu software become the big success that it is.
It almost makes you wish the license forbid the distribution of Gnu software using non-GPL'd code. :-)
cjs -- Curt Sampson <cjs@example.com> +81 90 7737 2974 Mobile sites and software consulting: http://www.starling-software.com
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