Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 1st Jul 2009 20:19 UTC
General Unix "Earlier this year, people in many places wrote about the 40th anniversary of the moment Ken Thompson sat down and started to work on UNIX (which is actually in August). In fact, UNIX celebrates another birthday this year, even though on a slightly smaller scale. In July 1974, exactly 35 years ago, Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson published the first version of their seminal paper The UNIX Time-Sharing System in the Communications of the ACM."
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Roots Matter
by fretinator on Wed 1st Jul 2009 20:47 UTC
fretinator
Member since:
2005-07-06

I think the roots of Unix matter. All Unix and Unixish systems come from a multi-user, networked background. Thus, Unix-like applications expect to share the computer. On the other hand, Windows (aka DOS) comes from a single-user background - thnk CPM or other home computers of the day. The applications were for cataloging VCR tape collections, home finance, etc. Thus, even to this day, many Windows applications tend to expect full control of the computer.

Roots matter.

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