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VFP and Linux
Message
From
25/11/2001 18:42:30
 
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Title:
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00583845
Message ID:
00585581
Views:
48
Jerry,

>>>That question used to be asked a lot, four or five years ago. But, as things have progress, Linux has swept the Unix world by storm and now the question is: "Does that version of Unix run Linux apps?" IMO, it is only a matter of time before Linux replaces all versions of Unix.
>>
>>
>>IBM certainly seems to be more interested in selling Linux than AIX though I don't completely understand why. There is a funny TV ad for IBM Linux servers where a manager thinks that an entire roomfull of servers has been stolen. Actually, they have all been replaced by a single IBM mainframe running Linux.
>>
>>Is Linux Unix? Seems like a moot question. Richard Stallman believed it was important to claim that GNU which predated Linux is not Unix. GNU = Gnu's Not Unix.
>>
>>http://www.gnu.org/gnu/manifesto.html
>>
>>I'm sure this was just to avoid royalty issues.
>>
>>I don't think there is any major technical reason to claim that Linux is not Unix.
>>
>>Peter Robinson
>
>I don't think so either. Apparently, neither do many of Sun's customers. Sun is the one feeling the heat from all the migrations to Linux. Even giving away Solaris isn't helping. Sun has no desktop monoply to leverage, and StarOffice isn't pulling folks away from MS Office to SO on Solaris as fast as Sun would like, but it is giving folks a reason to move to Linux. What do you think, five more years and Sun is history?
>Jerry

It's awfully hard to be a hardware-only company and survive that's for sure. I figure they'll need to embrace Linux and add value that is Sun-specific in the hope that that will keep folks buying their hardware. However, the minute anyone else can provide their functionality for a lower price...
Best,


DD

A man is no fool who gives up that which he cannot keep for that which he cannot lose.
Everything I don't understand must be easy!
The difficulty of any task is measured by the capacity of the agent performing the work.
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