Bill Pechter wrote:
Roger Merchberger wrote:
IMHO, a <$1000 loaded home machine is *not*
supposed to outperform a >$4000
business machine. Oh, and Ward could prolly answer this: Was there a
version of Xenix available for an IBM / Clone? I know there was one for
the Tandy 2000, but that's the only version I've ever seen. How far did
M$'s licensing go with that OS?
SCO's first release of Xenix was for an XT with 512K or more RAM. It
was a dog, Xenix for the X86 series didn't hit its stride until the AT
and the 80286.
I've got a copy of Xenix-86 and it was pretty solid on the AT&T
I didn't say it was unstable, I said it was a dog, as in dog-slow on
a 4.77MHz 8088. Despite some criticisms I have about the video
interface, the AT&T (Olivetti) 6300 was vastly superior to the XT.
And the 6300+ may have been the most stable 80286 box ever built,
especially with AT&T Unix on it, even running that first generation
DOSMerge product.
--
Ward Griffiths <mailto:gram@cnct.com> <http://www.cnct.com/home/gram/>
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