HAHAHHA! SCO! The Silicon Beach pirates ... Linux thieves! Coherent.. I used it on a 386 after playing with Microware's OS9v2 for Color Computers. I stuck with that COCO3 until the early 90s. I refused to use XT 8088s or MS-Dos because they simply couldn't multitask. I put jNos on one, text-file driven tcpip with tools, for ham radio, then put a bunk IP at the end of the nameserver list and pointed the connection that way. It was a ham radio tcp/ip node list. MAYBE a few hundred kilobytes. A half-hour later the XT was STILL chugging it'a way through the nameserver list, and I pulled the plug. Rr Steven Schear wrote:
In the early-1970s, while working for TRW Data Systems (founded by Larry and Doug Michaels, who later founded the early commercial Unix provider Santa Cruz Operations) I led development of a proprietary OS for the Datapoint 2200. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datapoint_2200 The OS ran on a descrete implementation of the 8008 processor after Intel had encountered tech and yield issues. The OS supported drivers for keyboard, CRT, disk and tape drives, telecommunications controlling dozens of specialized remote terminals, and a hashed access database, With dynamic overlays it all fit within 16 KB of RAM.
On Wed, Dec 25, 2019, 5:44 PM jim bell <jdb10987@yahoo.com> wrote:
The New York Times: Chuck Peddle Dies at 82; His $25 Chip Helped Start the PC Age.https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/24/technology/chuck-peddle-dead.html
6502 microprocessor.