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Date:      Thu, 10 Oct 2002 09:28:19 -0600
From:      Brett Glass <brett@lariat.org>
To:        Terry Lambert <tlambert2@mindspring.com>, "Gary W. Swearingen" <swear@attbi.com>
Cc:        chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Congrats to Brett Glass for new BSD history article
Message-ID:  <4.3.2.7.2.20021010092453.02934160@localhost>
In-Reply-To: <3DA48E32.2F841084@mindspring.com>
References:  <20021008145226.K30424-100000@pogo.caustic.org> <3DA36DF9.CD52524F@mindspring.com> <lnadln5wox.dln@localhost.localdomain>

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At 02:14 PM 10/9/2002, Terry Lambert wrote:

>It was, in fact, this lack of having paid fees that permitted the
>withdrawl of the UCSD P-code system from distribution, for all
>licensees except Apple, who paid a fee to ensure the license was
>in perpetuity, and used the P-code system in their "QuickDraw"
>implementation in the original Macintosh.

It was used in some code for the Lisa, but not in QuickDraw for
the Mac. (If it had, QuickDraw would have been "SlowDraw.")
Silicon Valley Systems created a native code compiler for the
Mac that accepted the same flavor of Pascal, and this is what
was used for Mac development.

>> One exception might have been AT&T itself, which (as I understand
>> things) might have paid very high prices for the products of WE &
>> Bell Labs, as allowed by the 1956 decree, to fund those companies.
>
>Perhaps.  But they were not permitted to recover such costs
>externally, so the accounting tricks only mattered to their
>bottom line tax bill.

It mattered more than that. Remember, they were subject to "rate of
return" regulation. If they could beef up the "funny money" expenses 
they booked, they could charge customers more real dollars.

--Brett


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