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UNIX and Linux Applications Discuss UNIX and Linux software applications. This includes SQL, Databases, Middleware, MOM, SOA, EDA, CEP, BI, BPM and similar topics.

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Old 05-05-2008
chinni1888 chinni1888 is offline
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Question Where is UNIX applied presently

Can any one of you post the applications of UNIX?
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Old 05-09-2008
chinni1888 chinni1888 is offline
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Internet

Internet is designed using UNIX
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Old 05-09-2008
fabtagon fabtagon is offline
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Homework

BTW: Arpanet/Internet is older than Unix
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Old 05-14-2008
chm0dvii chm0dvii is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fabtagon View Post
Homework

BTW: Arpanet/Internet is older than Unix
Actually, no your wrong. They were both designed the same year.

Arpanet:
The first permanent ARPANET link was established on November 21, 1969, between the IMP at UCLA and the IMP at SRI. By December 5, 1969, the entire 4-node network was connected

Unix:
Unix (officially trademarked as UNIX®, sometimes also written as Unix or Unix® with small caps) is a computer operating system originally developed in 1969 by a group of AT&T employees at Bell Labs including Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie and Douglas McIlroy.
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Old 05-14-2008
chm0dvii chm0dvii is offline
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UNIX has a plethora of applications. One of the most popular is the Unix/Apache combination.

Code:
Developer	March 2008	Percent	April 2008	Percent	Change
Apache	        82,454,415	 50.69%	83,554,638    50.42%	-0.27
Microsoft	 57,698,503	  35.47% 58,547,355    35.33%	-0.14
Google	           9,012,004	   5.54%   10,079,333	 6.08%	    0.54
lighttpd	   1,552,650	    0.95%   1,495,308	   0.90%    -0.05
Sun	          546,581	     0.34%   547,873	    0.33%     -0.01
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Old 05-15-2008
era era is offline Forum Advisor  
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Unix wasn't connected to the original Arpanet, though. ARPANET - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Quote:
The initial ARPANET consisted of four IMPs. They were installed at:
  • UCLA, where Leonard Kleinrock had established a Network Measurement Center (with an SDS Sigma 7 being the first computer attached to it).
  • The Stanford Research Institute's Augmentation Research Center, where Douglas Engelbart had created the ground-breaking NLS system, a very important early hypertext system (with the SDS 940 that ran NLS, named 'Genie', being the first host attached).
  • UC Santa Barbara (with the Culler-Fried Interactive Mathematics Centre's IBM 360/75, running OS/MVT being the machine attached).
  • The University of Utah's Graphics Department, where Ivan Sutherland had moved (for a DEC PDP-10 running TENEX).
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Old 05-15-2008
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This is a good link:

History of the Internet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Quote:
The term "Internet" was adopted in the first RFC published on the TCP protocol (RFC 675[1]: Internet Transmission Control Program, December 1974). It was around the time when ARPANET was interlinked with NSFNet, that the term Internet came into more general use,[13] with "an internet" meaning any network using TCP/IP. "The Internet" came to mean a global and large network using TCP/IP. Previously "internet" and "internetwork" had been used interchangeably, and "internet protocol" had been used to refer to other networking systems such as Xerox Network Services.[14]

As interest in wide spread networking grew and new applications for it arrived, the Internet's technologies spread throughout the rest of the world. TCP/IP's network-agnostic approach meant that it was easy to use any existing network infrastructure, such as the IPSS X.25 network, to carry Internet traffic. In 1984, University College London replaced its transatlantic satellite links with TCP/IP over IPSS.

Many sites unable to link directly to the Internet started to create simple gateways to allow transfer of e-mail, at that time the most important application. Sites which only had intermittent connections used UUCP or FidoNet and relied on the gateways between these networks and the Internet. Some gateway services went beyond simple e-mail peering, such as allowing access to FTP sites via UUCP or e-mail
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