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blog:why_start_tuhs [2016/01/01 06:56] – ↷ Page moved and renamed from blog_why_start_tuhs to blog:why_start_tuhs wktblog:why_start_tuhs [2025/09/15 10:58] (current) admin
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 The Caldera license meant that I was finally able to make much of the archive of Unix material publicly available. This is now known as the "Unix Archive", and it is now [[http://www.tuhs.org/archive_sites.html|mirrored by several sites world-wide]]. The Caldera license meant that I was finally able to make much of the archive of Unix material publicly available. This is now known as the "Unix Archive", and it is now [[http://www.tuhs.org/archive_sites.html|mirrored by several sites world-wide]].
  
-**Postscript:**  I wrote the above before the lawsuit between the new SCO Group (TSG) and IBM. That farce is superbly documented on Pamela Jone's blog [[http://www.groklaw.net/|groklaw.net]]. There were no winners in the saga, and unfortunately old SCO's name was tarnished irrevocably.+**Postscript:**  I wrote the above before the lawsuit between the new SCO Group (TSG) and IBM. That farce is superbly documented on Pamela Jone's blog groklaw.net. There were no winners in the saga, and unfortunately old SCO's name was tarnished irrevocably.
  
 Unix has essentially been superseded by Linux, but the Unix Heritage Society still tries to collect and curate the old systems, stories and artifacts from when Unix was a dominant system in the IT industry. I'm sure I'll write about some of the early systems that we have been able to resurrect. I'm looking forward to Unix's 50th anniversary in 2019. Unix has essentially been superseded by Linux, but the Unix Heritage Society still tries to collect and curate the old systems, stories and artifacts from when Unix was a dominant system in the IT industry. I'm sure I'll write about some of the early systems that we have been able to resurrect. I'm looking forward to Unix's 50th anniversary in 2019.
  
blog/why_start_tuhs.txt · Last modified: 2025/09/15 10:58 by admin