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Date:      Tue, 10 Nov 1998 06:20:48 -0500
From:      "Larry S. Marso" <larry@marso.com>
To:        freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   SCO is Intel's premier Unix OS
Message-ID:  <19981110062048.D6799@marso.com>

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At least it's not Linux. 

              Monterey: Intel's premier Unix OS

              By Deni Connor
              Network World, 11/09/98

              Somers, N.Y. - Intel's
              endorsement of The Santa
              Cruz Operation's UnixWare
              as the premier Unix
              operating system for Intel
              processors can only help
              solidify the place of Unix in
              users' future operating
              system plans. 

              Intel has blessed an
              initiative, dubbed Project
              Monterey, that will lead to
              several new versions of Unix.

              The first is a flavor of SCO's
              UnixWare for 32-bit
              processors from IBM and
              Intel that incorporates IBM
              DB2 and MQSeries
              middleware and is currently
              available. Future releases of
              this version will add IBM's
              AIX operating system
              technology. 

              IBM also will take current
              UnixWare technology and
              incorporate it into future
              versions of AIX to create a
              second flavor of the Project
              Monterey platform. 

              The third Unix operating
              system will be for Intel's
              IA-64 Merced processor,
              which is expected out in
              mid-2000. IBMand Intel
              have created a multimillion
              dollar fund to spur software
              development for this version
              of Unix. 

              "The net result is that this
              operating system is
              positioned to be the leading
              Unix operating system on
              the Intel architecture," says
              John Miner, vice president
              and general manager of
              Intel's Enterprise Server
              Group.

              While SCO, IBM and
              Sequent are united behind
              this initiative, the biggest
              winners are users of Intel
              processors. 

              "Intel is billing this initiative
              as the premier Unix
              operating system
              environment to move to
              Merced," says Brad Day,
              senior analyst with Giga
              Information Group in
              Norwell, Mass. With Project
              Monterey, users will be able
              to choose from three
              versions of Unix, depending
              on the hardware
              architecture they have
              selected, and will have an
              increased variety of Unix
              software and applications.

              Intel benefits from having
              "yet another operating
              system supplier pledge
              support for its platform,"
              says James Gruener, senior
              analyst for NT servers at
              Aberdeen Group in Boston.

              "IBM was one of the major
              holdouts with AIX. By now
              coming forth with this
              software . . . there could be
              crossover from customers
              who eventually move from
              the RS/6000 to IA-64,"
              Gruener says. 

              Whether users will see
              UnixWare as an alternative
              to Windows NT depends on
              several things, he says.
              "There is the timing involved
              when 64-bit UnixWare
              arrives vs. when 64-bit NT
              will be available. 

              The second issue is that
              customers have to choose
              whether they want a Unix
              environment based on IBM's
              legacy AIX or Microsoft's
              NT, which has larger
              independent software
              vendor support," Gruener
              says. Further, he says that
              Microsoft may not have the
              background in 64-bit
              technology that IBM
              research already has. 

              Project Monterey would be
              further strengthened by
              participation of other
              vendors, such as Compaq
              and Dell.

              Subo Guha, director of
              product marketing for Dell's
              Enterprise Systems Group,
              says, "The good news is that
              a lot of the enterprise-class
              Unix versions have been on
              Reduced Instruction Set
              Computing boxes. This
              announcement is bringing
              more robust Unix features to
              the Intel architecture."

              While Dell won't commit to
              one Unix architecture over
              another, it will continue to
              support Unix features that
              run on Intel architectures. 

              A number of software
              companies, including
              Netscape, the SAS Institute
              and Novell, have also
              committed to delivering
              applications for Unix on
              Merced. Among the
              hardware manufacturers
              that will use the new Unix
              software are Acer, Motorola
              Computer Group and Unisys
              Computer Systems.



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