Firebird At 20 Years 20
mAriuZ writes "From Jim
Starkey: "September 4th is the 20th anniversary of what is now Firebird. I quit my job at DEC
in August, took a three day end-of-summer holiday, and began work on
September 4, 1984 in my new career as a software entrepreneur. As best
as I can reconstruct, the first two files were cpre.c and cpre.h (C
preprocessor), later changed to gpre.c
and gpre.h.
The files were created on a loaner DEC Pro/350,
a PDP-11 personal computer that
went exactly nowhere, running XENIX. Gpre was my first
C program, XENIX was my first experience with Unix, and the Pro/350 was
my very last (but not lamented) experience with PDP-11s.""
And to think... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And to think... (Score:1)
Nyet (Score:2)
20 years? (Score:3, Interesting)
The homepage says that it has been in use since 1981.
That's more than 20 years.
Re:20 years? (Score:1)
PhoenixFoxBird! (Score:4, Funny)
It's a great browser, but I think this is a bit premature.
Xenix or Venix? (Score:3, Interesting)
Are you sure that wasn't Venix? I seem to recall a company called Venturecomm or something like that produced a stripped down version of BSD 'nix for the PDP-11 at relatively low cost.
Re:Xenix or Venix? (Score:2)
I think this was before Xenix belonged to Microsoft or something like that, I believe MS bought it from SCO.
Still looking for a x86 Xenix at low cost...
Re:Xenix or Venix? (Score:3, Informative)
But the article mentioned a dislike of Xenix, which I recall as being a fairly well polished product compared to Venix, which had poor manuals (although it did have some real-time extensions), and may have been missing a number of utilities.
The main reason I recall for using Venix over Xenix on the LSI-11/23 type machines was that Xenix was priced to run on the full-blown sys
Re:Xenix or Venix? (Score:3, Interesting)
There were plenty of regular AT&T Unix versions that ran on PDP-11s though.
Re:Xenix or Venix? (Score:3, Interesting)
I used the x86 version in the mid 90's, and had never heard of the PDP one.
Re:Xenix or Venix? (Score:1)
Uh? (Score:3, Funny)
I do like to try and stay informed, and I'm sure the story is fascinating, but I just don't get it.
The reason why this wasn't on the front page... (Score:4, Funny)
"My second real job was with DEC. DEC was a great place to work. Near total anarchy. I put out a very successful product called Datatrieve, which, due to a stupid political ploy by a manager, got cancelled. It didn't mean a thing. I got to write a monthly report saying "Problems: The project has been cancelled. If this isn't rectified, it could affect the schedule." It really didn't make any difference. The second version shipped on schedule, still cancelled. You've got to admire a company that succeeds despite the best efforts of its management."
Classic.
= 9J =