Who Really Contributed the High-End Tech to Project Monterey?

 
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Old 05-30-2010
Who Really Contributed the High-End Tech to Project Monterey?

Here's something interesting, a Santa Cruz 8K from October 26, 1998, which consists mostly of two press releases announcing the IBM-SCO joint partnership to do Project Monterey.
Guess who would be providing the bulk of the high-end enterprise capabilities and contributing them to UnixWare? Hint: Not SCO.
The idea of the project was a single Unix for the enterprise that Intel, IBM, SCO, Sequent, etc. would all unitedly push, for Intel's IA-64 platform and UnixWare would be beefed up for IA-32, and thus the end result would be one UNIX everyone could market for IA-32, IA-64 and Power platforms, after pooling resources. But it was IBM and Sequent, now part of IBM, who would do the heavy lifting with regard to the high-end beefing up.

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TopLevelShell(3)						  LessTif Manuals						  TopLevelShell(3)

NAME
TopLevelShell - widget from X toolkit SYNOPSIS
#include <X11/Shell.h> DESCRIPTION
TopLevelShell is a widget which is defined in the X Toolkit. We document its existence here for completeness. Please refer to the X Win- dow System documentation for the real information regarding this widget. X RESOURCES
Name Class Type Default Access ----------------------------------------------------------------------- XtNiconName XtCIconName String (null) CSG XtNiconNameEncoding XtCIconNameEncoding Atom NULL CSG XtNiconic XtCIconic Boolean NULL CSG XtNiconName XtNiconNameEncoding XtNiconic CLASS HIERARCHY
Object(3) Rect(3) UnNamedObj(3) Core(3) Composite(3) Shell(3) WMShell(3) VendorShell(3) TopLevelShell(3) CALLBACKS
CONVENIENCE FUNCTIONS
SEE ALSO
LessTif Project October 1998 TopLevelShell(3)