---- On Tue, 13 Nov 2001, Eric J. Korpela
(korpela(a)ssl.berkeley.edu) wrote:
> Actually Xenix was never a Microsoft
branded product.
Maybe true, but it was certainly plastered
with Microsoft copyrights.
All the
scripts and headers in the Tandy 16/6000
version were copyright
Microsoft.
> Then again Xenix was the clear proof
that M$ can not even compy a
great OS
> correctly. I remember using a version of
Xenix that only allowed 8.3
> naming of files (like M$-DOS)! Typical
M$
"innovation"... pheb!
I doubt it. I think early versions of
Xenix had the v7 filename
limits.
I've never seen one that recognized
extensions as anything special.
Eric
I've never seen the 8.3 in Xenix...
IIRC Microsoft had the SysV standard 13
character file names in Xenix like SysIII
(and IIRC v7).
It was BSD which did symbolic links and IIRC
255 character file names in the 4.2 BSD
Fast File System... SysV got this in SVR4
(about 1989 or so)...
Research had this in Edition 10...
Bill