2016-02-25 0:05 GMT+01:00 John Wallace <johnwallace4 at yahoo.co.uk>:
[snippage for brevity, sorry]
Some readers may remember (but most won't) that in 1999, QNX released a
freely distributable demo containing their QNX kernel, their Photon
MicroGui, an IP stack including Internet connectivity capability, and a
graphical web browser which even does JavaScript. So what. Well the so what
is that it all fitted on a 1.44MB floppy to run on a PC of that era.
Words and pictures: e.g.
http://toastytech.com/guis/qnxdemo.html
A movie (again from toastytech):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K_VlI6IBEJ0
I certainly remember QNX!
I worked on a project back in 1997-1999, the Inform at fone. A public payphone
with internet capabilities. It used QNX and photon. Someone at QNX
apparently wrote an article about it:
http://smallformfactors.mil-embedded.com/pdfs/QNX.Sum99.pdf
It actually worked quite well on a 66 MHz 486 CPU with quite small flash
memory.
/Mattis
Never used it myself, other than the demo, but it always sounded
interesting. Maybe like VAXELN, a well kept secret.
have a lot of fun
John Wallace
ps
QNX doesn't have HELP ADVANCED WOMBAT or a newsletter called The Wombat
Examiner.