UNIX
In order to understand the
popularity of Linux, we need to
travel back in time, about 30
years ago...
Imagine computers as big as
houses, even stadiums. While the
sizes of those computers posed
substantial problems, there was
one thing that made this even
worse: every computer had a
different operating system.
Software was always customized to
serve a specific purpose, and
software for one given system
didn't run on another system.
Being able to work with one system
didn't automatically mean that you
could work with another. It was
difficult, both for the users and
the system administrators.
Computers were extremely
expensive then, and sacrifices had
to be made even after the original
purchase just to get the users to
understand how they worked. The
total cost per unit of computing
power was enormous.
Technologically the world was
not quite that advanced, so they
had to live with the size for
another decade. In 1969, a team of
developers in the Bell Labs
laboratories started working on a
solution for the software problem,
to address these compatibility
issues. They developed a new
operating system, which was
- Simple and elegant.
- Written in the C programming
language instead of in assembly
code.
- Able to recycle code.
The Bell Labs developers named
their project "UNIX."
The code recycling features
were very important. Until then,
all commercially available
computer systems were written in a
code specifically developed for
one system. UNIX on
the other hand needed only a small
piece of that special code, which
is now commonly named the kernel.
This kernel is the only piece of
code that needs to be adapted for
every specific system and forms
the base of the UNIX system.
The operating system and all other
functions were built around this
kernel and written in a higher
programming language, C. This
language was especially developed
for creating the UNIX system.
Using this new technique, it was
much easier to develop an
operating system that could run on
many different types of hardware.
The software vendors were quick
to adapt, since they could sell
ten times more software almost
effortlessly. Weird new situations
came in existence: imagine for
instance computers from different
vendors communicating in the same
network, or users working on
different systems without the need
for extra education to use another
computer. UNIX did
a great deal to help users become
compatible with different systems.
Throughout the next couple of
decades the development of UNIX continued.
More things became possible to do
and more hardware and software
vendors added support for UNIX to
their products.
UNIX was initially found only
in very large environments with
mainframes and minicomputers (note
that a PC is a "micro" computer).
You had to work at a university,
for the government or for large
financial corporations in order to
get your hands on a UNIX system.
But smaller computers were
being developed, and by the end of
the 80's, many people had home
computers. By that time, there
were several versions of UNIX
available for the PC architecture,
but none of them were truly free
and more important: they were all
terribly slow, so most people ran
MS DOS or Windows 3.1 on their
home PCs.
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