Windows: The battle for an open standard

Ғылым және технология

By the end of the 90s the Unix workstation world had worked out that windows was a developing threat. How could they complete, well may windows could become a standard API they could provide an implementation of.
This video is sponsored by www.pcbway.com
00:00 - Intro
01:11 - A Brief work from our sponsors
01:41 - The world of workstations
04:29 - The rise of windows
05:20 - Sun PC
05:50 - Wabi
10:27 - Word 6 the Trojan Horse
13:37 - PWI An open Windows Spec
14:22 - Open standards bodies
16:35 - 1995 Win32 is here, but so is Java
17:38 - Sun refocuses on Servers
19:40 - Sun PCi, the PC on a card
21:51 - Sun starts making x86_64 servers/workstations
22:06 - Wine, and the legacy of PWI
24:20 - Thanks

Пікірлер: 295

  • @robertfindley921
    @robertfindley92114 күн бұрын

    Designing consumer electronics over the years, I've had several encounters with Microsoft. All negative. They tried to force the industry to adopt their proprietary NDIS as a standard for the first DOCSIS cable modems / gateways. They threatened to not put USB drivers in their operating system if we didn't adopt it in our devices. Luckily we (3COM, Motorola, Samsung, RCA, Sony, Nortel, Toshiba, ...) stood firm.

  • @graey2

    @graey2

    9 күн бұрын

    Fuck. NDIS, that is a term I haven't had nightmares about for a long time. They didn't get there in the end, but holy fuck did I have to use NDISWrapper for NDIS drivers for a while because so much hardware only came with 'decent' NDIS drivers, and that was a shitshow every time.

  • @Dudleymiddleton
    @Dudleymiddleton14 күн бұрын

    The SUN logo is extrememly cool!

  • @steveh1792

    @steveh1792

    14 күн бұрын

    An early batch of SUN business cards arrived with the logo printed wrong; it was straight, not rotated 45º as it was supposed to be. The marketing types handed the cards were concerned about handing them out to customers... Scott McNealy solved the problem by telling them to hand them to their customers ... rotated 45º clockwise. In short, quit complaining, get to work, we'll fix the minor problem with the next print batch. (SUN tech writer here, 1985-2009.)

  • @ktxed

    @ktxed

    13 күн бұрын

    clever too

  • @bionicgeekgrrl

    @bionicgeekgrrl

    8 күн бұрын

    Yes, it was always iconic growing up as there was always something with that logo wherever you looked in our house due to my father working for them, he stayed until oracle made him redundant 2 years before retirement, but he negotiated his package to avoid any pension deficit.

  • @awuuwa

    @awuuwa

    4 күн бұрын

    I agree

  • @theangrycolossal

    @theangrycolossal

    Күн бұрын

    Only today did I figure out what is actually going on with it, and it's brilliant

  • @dingo596
    @dingo59614 күн бұрын

    I like how part of this channel is just dedicated to documenting Microsoft's crimes.

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    14 күн бұрын

    It really does feel that way some times 😅

  • @williambrasky3891

    @williambrasky3891

    14 күн бұрын

    You see that recent Business Insider piece penned by/ with a bunch of high level Microsoft execs? Basically alleges that Ole Billy Gates, despite “stepping down” in 2006, never stopped running the company. And not like running the company from afar. They say he is still the first to review any new product. He has to approve any major update. He is even behind the recent pivot to Ai. As far back as 2015 he was in personal talks with Sam Altman about the partnership between Microsoft & OpenAI. (I wouldn’t be surprised if he didn’t have a hand in their decision to become a for profit nonprofit, but that’s just my own conjecture). He never left. No idea what the implications could be, but I’d imagine you’ve committed some serious fraud if you step down from your position as CEO of a public company then go on running the thing for almost 20 more years in secret.

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    9 күн бұрын

    @@williambrasky3891 I think we all knew after stepping down he would still have a lot of influence as the founder and a major share holder. However assuming whats in that article is true, then his current level of control goes far and above that, I dare say the SEC might have some interest in that one.

  • @TheUAoB
    @TheUAoB14 күн бұрын

    Proton is just the name of Valve's Wine fork. The DX/D3D components are DXVK for up to DX11 and VKD3D for DX12. These depend upon Vulkan support, incompatible hardware can use WineD3D which is the old WINE D3D->OpenGL implementation.

  • @hwertz10

    @hwertz10

    14 күн бұрын

    Yup! So Valve put in patches for Wine, and sometimes dxvk and vkd3d; then over time these filter back into regular wine, dxvk, and vkd3d (in general.) But the other important bit is the Mesa Gallium drivers -- as a Linux user since just before Win95 came out, my early systems didn't have 3D accelerators; if you wanted one you got an SGI. When the Voodoos and stuff came out, there was good Linux support. After that, essentially if you wanted trouble-free gaming you bought an Nvidia card; ATI was not up to snuff and besides the slowness of the Intel integrated GPUs, the 3D driver support in Linux was god-awful (the 2D was fine!). Just within the last 5-6 years, Mesa Gallium changed all that. You essentially have ATI/AMD and Intel drivers (and ones for some tablet GPUs, Mac M1/M2/M3, Qualcomm Ardreno, etc.) that run OpenGL and Vulkan up to the limits of the hardware; it goes back to shockingly old cards (I threw Ubuntu 24.04 on a Core 2 Duo and the GPU is pretty useless, but the 18 year old GPU doesn't just have some old driver that is still supported, it actually has fully modernized Mesa Gallium drivers written within the last 5-6 years!) I've personally run (with WineD3D) on a Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge, this was utterly hopeless with the old drivers. With Mesa Gallium it has a go at running many DX11 games and anything older is fine. Anything much newer and you have nice Vulkan support that dxvk uses for nicer dx9/10/11 support; if it's new enough to support DX12's newer memory model (Vulkan VM_BIND support is required) you have full DX12 support through vkd3d. The nice part, since as much common code as possible is in the Mesa Gallium core, many of those fixed Valve's put in to improve performance and compatibility of the Picasso (Ryzen GPU) in the Steam Deck were to Gallium itself and improved all Gallium-supported hardware.

  • @BoDiddly

    @BoDiddly

    12 күн бұрын

    @@hwertz10 The Voodoo's worked great for me, but I had the worst times with Nvidia! For about half a decade of using Nvidia (around the time I was first thinking about switching to Linux) I had a myriad of problems that I thought were Linux, but in actuality were Nvidia. I figured this out because by chance, I bought an Intel graphics card and all of those problems went away instantly!

  • @scottlarson1548
    @scottlarson154814 күн бұрын

    My favorite Microsoft interaction was when they sent an update that broke Dialup Networking. As usual they had a fix five minutes later but there was no way for our clients to download it. We asked Microsoft for permission to make copies of their fix for our clients but they told us they would consider that copyright infringement and they would have to get the fix from the Microsoft web site, the one they could no longer get to. I won't tell say what we actually did.

  • @mark879
    @mark87914 күн бұрын

    Learned something new. An open Windows standard would've been nice.

  • @milasudril

    @milasudril

    14 күн бұрын

    Windows API is too large

  • @ThePlayerOfGames

    @ThePlayerOfGames

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@@milasudril *bloated

  • @milasudril

    @milasudril

    12 күн бұрын

    To elaborate, for system services we already have POSIX (you will find the Windows API equivalents in kernel32.dll together with ws2_32.dll), which is good enough. What we don't have international standards for that is in Windows API include API:s regarding system configuration, general user interface, non-hardware accelerated drawing, audio, and MIDI. The interactions with files, processes and threads are easier to standardize. The UX must be allowed to be affected branding, which is very likely to leak into the API specification, especially with regards to theming. Audio interaction is not the same if you work within pro-audio compared to consumer audio.

  • @c1ph3rpunk

    @c1ph3rpunk

    6 күн бұрын

    Nice to your psychiatrist maybe, triple those visits.

  • @ctid107
    @ctid10714 күн бұрын

    Thanks so much for that. I joined the Sun distributor in 1996 as a presales guy and this brought back so many memories. Solaris workstations were mandated for us and we used Wabi with Wordperfect. I also remember Wordperfect rewritten in Java running on a JavaStation. Later I remember asking customers to resend docx Word attachments as doc as StarOffice only supported the latter. Later on we all had SunPci cards in Ultra 5s, for lunchtime games we used a vga switch to use a single monitor for both. Of course MS did end up "supporting" the Open Document Format spawned by StarOffice/OpenOffice.

  • @memovilmx6239

    @memovilmx6239

    14 күн бұрын

    To be fair ODF sucked huge time. Don't know if there are better implementations nowadays but back then was a terrible experience

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    14 күн бұрын

    They did implement it, but I seem to remember they implemented bits of it in odd ways, leading to their implementation being a bit broken. Not so broken, as to get in trouble, but sufficiently broken to encourage word users to stick with the old proprietary formats.

  • @zh84
    @zh8414 күн бұрын

    EU antimonopoly law eventually forced Microsoft to publish their "secret" API. As a programmer I would love to know what the mysterious supercharged routines are!

  • @aziztcf

    @aziztcf

    14 күн бұрын

    I guess it's just the regular routines, public ones have some delayuntiluserisannoyed() functions

  • @user-yg4kj2mf1p

    @user-yg4kj2mf1p

    14 күн бұрын

    Where was it published?

  • @user-yg4kj2mf1p

    @user-yg4kj2mf1p

    14 күн бұрын

    @@aziztcf The issue with secret APIs is that no guarantee of compatibility is made for subsequent versions of Windows, so use public APIs if you can.

  • @igorgiuseppe1862

    @igorgiuseppe1862

    11 күн бұрын

    @@aziztcf probably that and some secret questions that the os use to make sure no thirdy party is using their apis, to keep an advantage.

  • @szaszm_

    @szaszm_

    Күн бұрын

    @@user-yg4kj2mf1p Except if it's used by their own office suite, because they most likely won't break their own software.

  • @nazgulsenpai
    @nazgulsenpai14 күн бұрын

    Its been 2 years since I used Windows for gaming in favor of Linux, and so far there was a grand total of 1 game that I wanted to play that did not work because anticheat, but even that now works in Linux. Its incredible how far Windows compatibility has come, and CodeWeavers and Valve deserve a ton of credit for their efforts. And GloriousEggroll, bless that man.

  • @Parker8752

    @Parker8752

    14 күн бұрын

    Yeah; no corporation is your friend, but occasionally they can be allies for their own reasons - valve realising that putting all their eggs in the microsoft basket would be bad for them has been good for the rest of us.

  • @nazgulsenpai

    @nazgulsenpai

    14 күн бұрын

    @@Parker8752 well said

  • @Dong_Harvey

    @Dong_Harvey

    10 күн бұрын

    ​@@Parker8752Valve's decision was very significant considering that Gabe Newell is the reason Windows 1.0 was completed in the first place

  • @theautomaticfiend

    @theautomaticfiend

    10 күн бұрын

    Codeweavers doesn't get enough credit, usually it's just valve that gets mentioned.

  • @GoogleDoesEvil

    @GoogleDoesEvil

    10 күн бұрын

    CodeWeavers wrote the worst code I've ever seen. Windows is inherently object oriented and yet they build everything in C because "Linus says C++ bad!" and they love to play compiler and exploit undocumented behavior in GCC.

  • @kmg501
    @kmg50114 күн бұрын

    Never trust Microsoft, NEVER.

  • @tiberiusbrain

    @tiberiusbrain

    14 күн бұрын

    Thing is, same goes for google and apple.

  • @dookucount

    @dookucount

    14 күн бұрын

    Trust any for-profit company to be in it for profit. 😉

  • @davel4030

    @davel4030

    14 күн бұрын

    Who does? Always look over your shoulder.

  • @knoxduder

    @knoxduder

    14 күн бұрын

    Never trust anyone that tells you to never trust .

  • @Dr.Dawson

    @Dr.Dawson

    14 күн бұрын

    Couldn’t agree more.

  • @RachaelSA
    @RachaelSA14 күн бұрын

    Our Father, who art SUN Microsystems, Hallowed be thy name.

  • @doalwa

    @doalwa

    14 күн бұрын

    Amen 🙏

  • @nazgulsenpai

    @nazgulsenpai

    14 күн бұрын

    You spelled Oracle wrong! Seriously, RIP SUN!

  • @fuller9x

    @fuller9x

    14 күн бұрын

    In the name of the Milner, Ellison and Oates.....Init S

  • @TheEvertw
    @TheEvertw14 күн бұрын

    Yep, this is how it went down. In other video's RetroBytes (and @Asianometry) discussed the UNIX wars, which were happening while Windows became dominant. If one of the UNIX vendors had thought to port their OS to the 80486 for a low price, UNIX would have become dominant in the early 90ies. But the short-sighted infighting over a diminishing market ended those vendors. Linux became usable when Windows already was dominant, and has been fighting an uphill battle ever since. So, Window's success isn't only due to Bill Gates' business acumen, but also by severe mismanagement by its competitors -- who failed to realize they _were_ competitors until it was too late. The Unique Selling Point of Windows has always been its support by game vendors. Proton has finally taken that away.

  • @AnnatarTheMaia

    @AnnatarTheMaia

    14 күн бұрын

    Solaris runs faster than GNU / Linux on the same hardware. I ran Solaris 2.5.1 on a 80486 and then on a Pentium 90, and it ran just fine, provided it had the drivers for everything. The only thing missing at the time was the Netscape browser for Solaris on the i86pc (which would later be corrected by porting Mozilla, respectively Firefox to Solaris). Then I got a prototype quad Pentium Pro server running at 200 MHz and we slapped Solaris 10 and ZFS on that, and that was our storage server for about a decade. I still run Solaris 10 on my intel-based PC-bucket which I built myself, and it's my primary desktop. Solaris 10 flies on it, it's so fast.

  • @georgerogers1166

    @georgerogers1166

    14 күн бұрын

    BSDi lawsuit ruined that.

  • @TheEvertw

    @TheEvertw

    14 күн бұрын

    @@georgerogers1166 Yes, the BSDi lawsuit was part of the UNIX wars.

  • @_chrisr_

    @_chrisr_

    14 күн бұрын

    The problem also was that Windows 3.x/95 etc were more performant than the Unixes (even Linux) as they offered full multitasking etc whereas the Windows line used cooperative multitasking which is much faster at the cost of stability. I remember running X on 386 and 486 machines and it was noticeably slower. Once we got the more powerful hardware then the WinNT was more equivalent to Unixes of the time but had the backwards support for older apps so that was a compelling draw for customers

  • @t3chrs

    @t3chrs

    14 күн бұрын

    SunOS ran on x86 before sparc was even around. That isn’t why “Unix lost “. Btw, there is more *nix out there today than ever before. MacOS, iOS, Android etc.

  • @partlyawesome
    @partlyawesome14 күн бұрын

    It's disappointing that efforts towards opening the standard stopped, I wouldn't have been surprised if the efforts would have been more mature than what we have with Wine and Proton.

  • @gregfarley715
    @gregfarley71514 күн бұрын

    Bloody hell I love a new Saturday RetroBytes video!!!!!!

  • @Cavi587
    @Cavi58714 күн бұрын

    If only Unix came to the casual user and to home PCs a lot earlier with more aggresive strategy, there is a possibility we'd be living in a Windows free world. Sadly that's not the case and after decades systems like Linux are only starting to really grow in the desktop market, but Windows is still dominant.

  • @cubeflinger
    @cubeflinger14 күн бұрын

    Just built a windows 98 / xp machine. It is surprising despite having lived through it, what a wild west it was back then.

  • @keirthomas-bryant6116
    @keirthomas-bryant611614 күн бұрын

    Having lived through his period, and being an IT journalist for much of it, and also even considering myself an amateur computing historian, I had no idea about this attempt for an open standard. Fascinating stuff, thanks.

  • @DavidVozak
    @DavidVozak14 күн бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @ctid107
    @ctid10714 күн бұрын

    When RetroBytes appears in my subscription list, it's automatically number one to watch. Thanks.

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    14 күн бұрын

    That's nice of you to say.

  • @marksterling8286
    @marksterling828614 күн бұрын

    Fantastic video, I lived through pc support back through the 80s and 90s and saw the slow change from people wanting WordPerfect and lotus 123 to word and excel. Also because I did support in a large research labs the mixed and sometimes inventive approach to do word processing and email in a corporate environment with some very high end work stations. We had a ton of sgi kit that got replaced slowly with nt4 machines over just a few years

  • @MonochromeWench
    @MonochromeWench14 күн бұрын

    The bigger problem with compatibility is not the secret APIs as Microsoft needed to keep them unchanging for office but the undocumented internals of Windows that some application developers figured out and used instead of the documented APIs. It meant that every version/implemenetation of Windows needed to do things in exactly the same way or these badly behaved applications would stop working. This created big backwards compatibility headaches for Microsoft and difficulties for anyone trying to implement the Windows API. Standardising Win16 while completely missing the threat that was Windows NT and Win32 is exactly what I'd expect. Seems like a lot of people in the industry did not take Windows NT very seriously as a competitor so ignored everything about it. NT was aimed squarely at the workstation Market and they failed to act.

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    14 күн бұрын

    In the publics mind NT was the project MS was always working on yet never releasing, then when it did come out it needed a spec of PC that was outside the means of most, and it just looked like an expensive version windows 3.1 to most PC users. It did not really make much of an impact until NT4, and by then average PC specs had risen to the point where they could run NT, and some people could see the advantages in running it. However even then most users stuck with the 95, 98, ME product line. Until XP effectively made NT the default. So initially NT really did get ignored, and most where not confident MS could produce a quality workstation product. If they had not been able to hire Dave Cuttler when they did, I'm not sure they could have done.

  • @Choralone422

    @Choralone422

    14 күн бұрын

    The OPs comment is part of the reason why the migration from XP to Vista was so painful for many application developers along with users. Under Vista many of those undocumented features that application developers (and especially malware creators!) used in Microsoft Win32 based OS from 95 through XP no longer worked. Microsoft had made major changes to many Windows APIs starting with Vista, partially due to how malware became a major widespread issue while XP was mainstream. In the 2000s and early 2010s I worked as onsite IT support for the US military. The migration from XP to Vista/Windows 7 was PAINFUL due to many specialized applications having major issues or outright not working at all under the newer OSs. It really became a war between "migrate users due to security issues w/ XP & because people very high up have ordered it" vs "migrate users & break things needed for national security & readiness" for far too long.

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    14 күн бұрын

    @@RetroBytesUK I guess you've read Zachary's "Showstopper". A tale of an ordeal.

  • @wysoft

    @wysoft

    12 күн бұрын

    ​@Choralone422 I don't know that you can say it was anything developers assumed about the internals of the system so much as it was about developers assuming that their application was king - specifically that users would be running it as an Administrator level user. It was UAC that broke so many applications because they simply couldn't deal with the reality of being told "no." So registry and files stem virtualization had to come about to deal with those applications who demanded to be able to write to global locations. I remember dealing with this as far back as NT4 as I followed the practice of running as a normal user at all times - so many applications just wouldn't even run. Developers had a real multitasking, multiuser, secure system (in terms of design, not reality - NT certainly had its share of exploits), but developers still treated the application environment like it was DOS or Win 3.1/95, because they were too lazy to develop their applications to work properly in a least privileged envieonment. I don't put the blame on Microsoft here at all.

  • @WillsJazzLoft
    @WillsJazzLoft9 күн бұрын

    Four years ago I'd switched to Linux - somewhat by accident or default. I'd not written down the product key for my copy of Windows 8.1. So when my hard drive went down, I was up the creek. It was after that that I found out about Linux and I've not looked back since then. I'm thankful everyday when I think about how much ' pain and suffering ' I've diverted since making that switch. I'm a happy camper

  • @GoogleDoesEvil

    @GoogleDoesEvil

    9 күн бұрын

    I'm going to call you a liar, by the time Windows 8.1 was out the product key was built into the system firmware.

  • @sugaryhull9688

    @sugaryhull9688

    8 күн бұрын

    ​@@GoogleDoesEvilCould be a custom build that didn't have an existing Windows 7 key 🤷‍♀️

  • @knoxduder
    @knoxduder14 күн бұрын

    I know it’s popular to *&it on Windows and Microsoft, but I would argue despite not being perfect, they’ve brought a lot to the table and have managed to accomplish some amazing things, at scale no less. I also loved Vista, and really like my Windows 10 with OneDrive. I would also argue every platform has its own list of pros and cons. But I’m just someone that needs things to work seamlessly on a daily basis, for years.

  • @SpiffingNZ
    @SpiffingNZ14 күн бұрын

    10 years from now is the year of the Linux Desktop???

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    14 күн бұрын

    Its a different predicitoon to next year will be the year of linux on the desktop. In 10 years I think the desktop market will be considerably smaller with the growth in BYOD in business and MS will simply nolonger care.

  • @judewestburner

    @judewestburner

    14 күн бұрын

    Every year is ten years

  • @memovilmx6239

    @memovilmx6239

    14 күн бұрын

    Yup since 1991. 10 years from now will be the Linux desktop year.

  • @shadowangel8005

    @shadowangel8005

    14 күн бұрын

    Linux is improving fast, theres a few rough edges still though for gamers, everyday users.

  • @mindaugasstankus5943

    @mindaugasstankus5943

    14 күн бұрын

    In decade desktop may not exist. Everything else already Linux, BSD or some RTOS.

  • @sinisterpisces
    @sinisterpisces14 күн бұрын

    Great video. I'd forgotten all about WABI. I also always really appreciate you taking the time to explain how the various standards bodies and behind the scenes business negotiations fit into things historically. It's not just new shiny technology all the time. I didn't know about the secret API that Microsoft used for early Word/Excel on Windows, but I'm not surprised at all. It was the most vile of their evil superpowers. As a Mac user who still, 32 years later, considers Word 5.1a the peak of word processing technology, I have to admit I'm still over here boggling a bit a the abomination that was Word 6 being the deathblow to Sun. (Then again, Word 6 for Mac came later and was uniquely terrible.)

  • @borlibaer

    @borlibaer

    13 күн бұрын

    For me it was a little efford to switch from Ami Pro / Word Pro to MS Word. Because of the "MS Standard un Business" I was forced to. My last MS Word version was "7", the user interface I hate but it was needed because I created several documentations related to enterprise IT deployments. Well, after being f*cked by the "new world order of liars and cheaters" I can enjoy all the retro stuff. Win 7 is my very last MS OS, switching to Linux for the online stuff which requires current OS. My most modern Intel box is a i3 and i5 (old VAIO Laptop) 4th Gen. . The only advantage of modern Intel based hardware is performance for cost of electricity for CAD, CGI. Electronic musical instruments and studio mixing and producer equipment are all being virtualized because of sufficient computer power. But nevertheless, in the past we had much more pleasant creativity and joy. 🖖

  • @cferrarini
    @cferrarini13 күн бұрын

    Amazing!!!! Love your videos. I knew this workstations from Comdex Shows in my schooldays in the 90s. Me and my friends didnt got the chance to use them, and there was nothing about them on the internet yet! Its interesting to see also a conversation with Dave Cutler, Microsoft Engineer from Dave´s Garage Channel, how they presented Sun Staff with a Coffin Greeting Card among other interesting stories.

  • @RobSchofield
    @RobSchofield14 күн бұрын

    That was great - exactly my professional vintage 🤩

  • @DrTedEsq
    @DrTedEsq14 күн бұрын

    I really enjoyed this talk. Not what I expected... When I clicked, I was gearing up for a discussion of that time in the 1990's, when Microsoft was trying to co-opt all sorts of internet standards and pretend that the internet was a fad. Thanks again for the excellent walk down memory lane.

  • @gnored
    @gnored5 күн бұрын

    I oversaw our documentation department's move from Unix to Windows. In the process we booted Interleaf, which cost #10,000 per seat per year and couldn't even read a jpeg file, for our 640k pcs. The replacement software, Ventura, was buy-once-to-own, and it could import a huge variety of other graphics formats. Since we'd had to redraw all the dialog boxes in our software in Interleaf, and we could now just use screen captures, the savings were enormous. And frankly, the user experience was better too. I did not regret losing those Sun and Apollo workstations one little bit.

  • @ScarletSwordfish
    @ScarletSwordfish13 күн бұрын

    MS ceasing production of Windows - what a bright, happy future that would be!

  • @JamieCrookes
    @JamieCrookes12 күн бұрын

    Great video as always sir!

  • @TheSulross
    @TheSulross14 күн бұрын

    It's true that Microsoft is wasting enormous money by continuing to support the Windows kernel, which is no longer of any strategic advantage to them. Indeed it's just a maintenance millstone hanging around their corporate kneck. They could just completely concentrate all their resources on the Linux kernel, their pet distro of Linux, and incorporate Wine/Proton to be the basis of their so-called desktop Windows product - for all the users that are muscle-memory habituated to Windows GUI. No user would care less that the underlying kernel is ultimately a Linux kernel - WSL support would now just be a Linux distro-flavored simple process on said kernel. The one impediment would be the Windows ACL permissions model - that would have to be grafted in so they could have nice, performant, transparent support of their file systems and corporate software management layers. That is THE one forte of Windows desktop now - it can be locked down for corporate control and administration that exceeds all other desktop operating systems, and that is why big corporations love standardizing on Windows, because more than anything else they want to exert Orwellian Big Brother control over corporate computing resources. And Microsoft is all about enabling corporate American to achieve IT Orwellianism.

  • @TenOfZero1
    @TenOfZero113 күн бұрын

    Great video. Thank-you 🙂

  • @MagnusVojbacke
    @MagnusVojbacke3 күн бұрын

    RB has got to be my favorite retro computing video creator!

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    3 күн бұрын

    That's kind of you to say Magnus

  • @lunsj
    @lunsj14 күн бұрын

    Thanks for this. I've been trying to remember the name Wabi for ages. Back in the late 90s I attended a Linux conference and someone had a box showing off Wabi running Windows 3.1. I couldn't remember that name and kept thinking of Wubi which is Ubuntu's solution for running on Windows.

  • @larsiparsii
    @larsiparsii14 күн бұрын

    Great video! I watched the whole thing. Promise!

  • @larsiparsii

    @larsiparsii

    14 күн бұрын

    I feel asleep :(

  • @darryllyle5250
    @darryllyle525014 күн бұрын

    Thank you for another excellent video. All of your videos take me back to a time when computing was fun. For me, anyway.

  • @cyneater6300
    @cyneater630010 күн бұрын

    love the channel once again learn something also relived memories of computing

  • @zxrenew5642
    @zxrenew564214 күн бұрын

    Brilliant again!

  • @sydtopia1
    @sydtopia114 күн бұрын

    Just after I think I know al the history about computers, this video shows how little I know. Great video. :)

  • @JamesHalfHorse
    @JamesHalfHorse14 күн бұрын

    I never had a lot of need to get into the Sun world but my roomie did. He says it basically died for him when all the support resources taken away/paywalled after a buyout. I think he even has/had a Sun laptop which is something I have yet to see a review of anywhere.

  • @guitar-jo
    @guitar-jo14 күн бұрын

    Damn good video. Happy to have subscribed! Here's a Like and a comment as well.

  • @spencerholdaway
    @spencerholdaway13 күн бұрын

    Great vid. It wasn't just that Word Perfect was slower, the early windows versions were so full of bugs probably due to the API or Microsoft making it purposely difficult that it was an awful experience. You should also cover the disaster that was Novell deciding it was a good idea to take on Microsoft with an Office suite! Funnily enough, Word Perfect is in there.

  • @alexandermirdzveli3200
    @alexandermirdzveli320014 күн бұрын

    Thank you for getting rid of background music! Now I can finally enjoy the video, not struggle through it.

  • @fattomandeibu
    @fattomandeibu14 күн бұрын

    Having a separate monitor for playing games happened to me with my A1200 of all things in around '96 or so. As a cheeky teenager, I'd developed a "business" of charging people a fiver for writing up CVs in Wordsworth, and also some basic book keeping stuff for the likes of the local window cleaner during tax season. Of course, doing all this at a resolution of 640x288(there was an interlaced mode available, but it gave me a headache after about 10 minutes) become pretty tiresome pretty quick, so I got a VGA monitor and an Amiga RGB to VGA cable. When attempting to run a game, it would switch to 15.5kHz, and being that this was a monitor I bought for 30 quid, it didn't like that one bit, so I also had to have an old TV hooked via RF for when I wanted to play a game. All this so I could fund my gaming habit and get myself a PlayStation and N64 plus games... then again, I suppose nothing much has changed in almost 30 years...

  • @RichardDzien
    @RichardDzien14 күн бұрын

    I didn't even know this had been a thing. But also from the sound of it it was all over before it really began. Plus as a teenager when 95 came out etc all my knowledge came from PC magazines, whom i don't think had ever heard of Sun themselves.

  • @videodrone9558
    @videodrone955812 күн бұрын

    You got the bits about Hyper-V wrong; Hyper-V is a type 1 hypervisor, it doesn't run *ontop* of any operating system. It becomes the Operating system and runs virtual machines on top. When you install Hyper-V on a windows workstation, the OS you "see" is a privileged VM. Hyper-V is Ring -1, the host OS becomes part of the parent partition on Ring 0. Type 2 Hypervisors run on top of a host operating system; this is hypervisors like virtual box (no direct hardware access). So, Hyper-V doesn't "run" on Linux in Azure, Hyper-V is Hyper-V. (Consumer version of this is now called Azure Stack HCI, previously Windows Hyper-V Server)

  • @Elizabeth-vh6il
    @Elizabeth-vh6il14 күн бұрын

    Sun Microsystems taking a leaf out of Commodore's Bridgeboard idea there.

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    11 күн бұрын

    Plenty of companies took that route. Acorn did so as well with the same motivation: to allow users to keep their existing machines and give them a way to run DOS and Windows applications on it with reasonable performance. Indeed, Acorn went back and forth on this, initially planning a 286 card for their Archimedes machine, then providing a software emulator, then adopting third-party x86 cards, before going all-in on a dual-processor architecture with the Risc PC. The problem with this approach is that it never really appealed to people just wanting to run DOS and Windows applications, it often didn't provide great performance, it usually involved weird workarounds and compromises, and buying a separate PC was probably better, too, since you could then have another machine for someone to use. And offering such things proved to be a huge distraction from just getting native applications onto the host platform, whether that was AmigaDOS, RISC OS, MacOS, SunOS, or whatever. You can see why cooler heads prevailed and they bought StarOffice instead of continuing to believe that people would be happy running a Windows version of Word in a weird compatibility environment.

  • @Sauceyjames
    @Sauceyjames14 күн бұрын

    Thumbs up 👍🏽

  • @arnechino
    @arnechino12 күн бұрын

    That thumbs up almost "fell out" the screen :)

  • @nanothrill7171
    @nanothrill717114 күн бұрын

    that sun drip

  • @kFY514
    @kFY51411 күн бұрын

    The odd outcome of this whole story is that if you want to create a "build once, run anywhere" binary then your best shot in the modern day is actually a Windows EXE. It'll run on Windows natively, on Linux via Wine, on macOS via CrossOver Wine (with x86 emulation handled by Rosetta if necessary)... You just need to keep Wine among the platforms you test on. Unless of course you write it as a web application and bundle it with the appropriate Electron binaries if necessary...

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    10 күн бұрын

    Targeting GTK with native code also works rather well too, assuming its just a regualr desktop app. As gtk is availbe for every major platform, and some of the more obsure ones.

  • @adambishop4655
    @adambishop465514 күн бұрын

    Yassss new RetroBytes

  • @keyboard_g
    @keyboard_g14 күн бұрын

    Microsoft used private apis and changing file formats to subterfuge Sun, and did the same with networking to rug pull Novell. Dos was stolen from CPM, and Windows 1-3 were all inferior to Amiga Workbench and MacOS.

  • @scottfranco1962
    @scottfranco196214 күн бұрын

    Steamdeck is not really enabled by Wine so much as Open3d. Wine just serves as the OS adaption layer. The game engines all use Open3d.

  • @fiveminutezen
    @fiveminutezen14 күн бұрын

    At least PCB way sponsors videos that are targeted to a receptive audience. I would totally use PCB way if I ever had a project that I could use them for.

  • @NoobsDeSroobs

    @NoobsDeSroobs

    5 күн бұрын

    Receptive? What do you mean by that?

  • @fiveminutezen

    @fiveminutezen

    5 күн бұрын

    @@NoobsDeSroobsWell I am usually watching videos about making things and engineering. I may at some point have a reason to use PCB way. Whereas with Nord VPN, I suppose anyone can use a VPN but it doesn't apply to me specifically.

  • @belstar1128
    @belstar112813 күн бұрын

    its interesting how unix went from being very expensive and only for professional to becoming free

  • @hhgttm
    @hhgttm14 күн бұрын

    Thanks for another enlightening and enjoyable video on a topic I didn’t know about. The idea of trying to create an open standard around someone else’s product seems bonkers! If it had happened, the world could be a very different place today. But as you pointed out, it was a time where technology evolved so fast that any attempt would have been negated by advancement anyway! This might have forced 16bit Windows to hold on longer than it did though. Thank goodness for true open source technology becoming so pervasive.

  • @whtiequillBj
    @whtiequillBj14 күн бұрын

    I'm unsure if Microsoft still is but, I believe back in 2016 Microsoft joined the Linux Foundation.

  • @Underestimated37

    @Underestimated37

    12 күн бұрын

    Yeah but I’d Chalk that up to their EEE strategy they’ve been using publicly and secretly since the 90s. They claim they don’t do it, but their behaviour suggests otherwise.

  • @Ginto_O
    @Ginto_O9 күн бұрын

    Its mind-blowing to see that photoshop's new file dialog havent changed in 40 years (or 35 whatever)

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    9 күн бұрын

    It is surprising how much of these applications don't change from one release to the next.

  • @igorgiuseppe1862
    @igorgiuseppe186211 күн бұрын

    its funny to think that you could plug an pc into another using an pci port, but its not surprising at all, you could do something like that with the n64 and sgi computers if you had an nintendo sdk and hardware development kit. i think there is a similiar thing to develop games for android but im not rich so i just an usb cable or plug it with wifi.

  • @greenrocket23
    @greenrocket2313 күн бұрын

    Thank God for Linux Mint

  • @Ned47628
    @Ned4762814 күн бұрын

    I'm now thinking about one of those sun boards and wondering about putting one in a PC.

  • @user-rx8lz6yz4f
    @user-rx8lz6yz4f14 күн бұрын

    The only reason not to use Linux now is if you need the Adobe suite. I guess there may be some other issues but man, as a sysadmin life would be good if everything ran on Linux with auto mounts and no more cifs. 🙏

  • @GoogleDoesEvil

    @GoogleDoesEvil

    9 күн бұрын

    I don't want to use Linux because Unix is awful 🙏

  • @dismuter_yt
    @dismuter_yt14 күн бұрын

    The year of Linux on the Desktop will be when help pages don't contain command line instructions, where almost everything can be done with clicks of the mouse, and you can download drivers for your device from the manufacturer's website and install them with a few easy clicks.

  • @Longlius

    @Longlius

    14 күн бұрын

    What drivers are you installing on Linux in 2024? Everything comes in the kernel now.

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    14 күн бұрын

    @@Longlius Indeed. Installing drivers from vendor Web sites is something you'd expect LGR to cover on some kind of Oddware episode. It might have been the done thing on Windows about twenty years ago, but I think that even the average captive Windows purchaser stopped doing that quite some time ago.

  • @Longlius

    @Longlius

    14 күн бұрын

    @@paul_boddie For real. Even on my Windows machine, the only drivers I've ever really bothered with are GPU drivers. But that's because 'GPU drivers' on Windows are more along the lines of something like mesa + the actual drivers you'd get in the Linux kernel.

  • @dismuter_yt

    @dismuter_yt

    14 күн бұрын

    @@Longlius No, not everything comes in the kernel. If you have newer hardware, distros can take time to include newer kernel versions containing the drivers or fixes. Back in 2020, to fix an issue with my new Threadripper system (I think it was with USB controllers), I had to manually grab a patch from a mailing list, apply it to the kernel source code, recompile the kernel for my Fedora distro. The fix took many weeks to come downstream and I could not wait. On Windows, you download the update and install it in 2 clicks, done. For some distros like Debian, drivers for new devices don't even make it in until the next major release. Whereas on Windows, such drivers are decoupled from the kernel, so they can be available faster and in a more convenient manner. There's also likely to be a bunch of devices on the market that will never have their drivers in the kernel (one reason being they're closed source) nor in all of the distro package managers. It just makes more sense for drivers to be separate and have their own independent delivery system.

  • @mgord9518

    @mgord9518

    14 күн бұрын

    In other words: "The year of Linux on the desktop is when Linux becomes Windows" Yeah, I think I'm fine with Linux being niche. Pandering to stupid people ruins technology

  • @SomeMorganSomewhere
    @SomeMorganSomewhere12 күн бұрын

    LOL that RISC OS shade ;)

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    10 күн бұрын

    I have a friend as Uni, who had a risc PC and spent the entire degree getting java working on it. He finally got him self a strongarm cpu upgrade in the end so he could finally use floating point in java. Just in time for acorn to discontinue the risc pc and clise its doors

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    8 күн бұрын

    @@RetroBytesUK The A7000+ was the machine you wanted if you needed floating-point support. Overall performance wasn't as good as the StrongARM, obviously, but the ARM7500FE with its built-in FPU outperforms the StrongARM doing FP emulation. If the SA-1500 had made it through the DEC-Intel transaction, I would imagine that it would have appeared in an A7000-like machine in preference to the Risc PC, which was pretty overrated as it was. However, I would agree that RISC OS wasn't really the platform you wanted to use if things like Java were your priority. At that point, the whole ship was drifting aimlessly towards its eventual asset-stripped demise.

  • @maniacaudiophile
    @maniacaudiophile9 күн бұрын

    One interesting thing with Proton and Wine is that they got a massive boost because of a talented guy want to play Nier Automata on his Linux machine.

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks439512 күн бұрын

    Microsoft has been hedged in by all the API and libraries they have released. Since every API release is used by virtually everyone, it's going to get decompiled and put into the Linux abstraction layer. Since MS is the de facto standard, they can't stop supporting old APIs, so those will remain indefinitely for people to study and refine. As for the cloud and Azure, they know they have to compete with everyone else and can't develop enough quality or compatibility with the Linux kernel through Windows. Thus they have to use Linux to get cloud devs and customers. The argument about the cloud wars is rather "who comes out on top"? Right now we have a de defacto standard in storage in S3, which came from Amazon. The more concerning future is one where a cloud platform vendor pushes out all the vendors, leaving us with an abstracted, homogeneous stack running on proprietary code where access is always limited to high level APIs. In that future, we all become limited users of megacorps with total control over APIs and codebases.

  • @BurritoVampire
    @BurritoVampire14 күн бұрын

    "Moooomm!! Can I watch the new Saturday morning RetroBytes?! This one looks like it's about a battle of good vs. evil!"

  • @e8root
    @e8root14 күн бұрын

    Wine is quite good for games. There are some games which still seem to run slower and where it matters and you need to at times fiddle with wrapper DLLs but overall for playing some Unity indie games (which are the best anyways...) games run more than well enough to not notice any difference. At times games run even better than on Windows, especially older games.

  • @AaronOfMpls

    @AaronOfMpls

    14 күн бұрын

    Indeed, I've got Windows 9x games and programs that run as well in Wine as they did in Windows 95 and 98 -- and better than they did in XP and 7. Not to mention Win16 games (like the old Windows Entertainment Packs) that won't run _at all_ in 64-bit Windows.

  • @DavePoo2
    @DavePoo214 күн бұрын

    Is it better to have one dominant overlord OS that everyone is using or loads of competing ones?

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    14 күн бұрын

    Different OSs suite different workloads and use cases, so its probably good we still have some variety. Although there are a lot less these days still in commerial use.

  • @AnnatarTheMaia

    @AnnatarTheMaia

    14 күн бұрын

    @@RetroBytesUK Solaris can do everything well, even video games; I do all my multimedia work on Solaris 10. If game companies supported it, Solaris would be a better gaming substrate than Windows 11 is, especially since one can switch to the realtime scheduler in it.

  • @user-tx4pm2xq3g
    @user-tx4pm2xq3g14 күн бұрын

    MS Windows in 2024 is a advert platform that gathers every bit of data, includes functions that are only picture icon and do not work e.g. Windows update button to stop update for a time but when first login if goto Updates it is already working / searching for updates / sending or gathering data. I unplug my internet connection and the latest update Windows disables my VPN from starting at bootup. I use to like Windows 3.0 etc. as leant in MS DOS considering a less invasive OS Linux etc. Middle finger MS.

  • @jonatdrmarlo
    @jonatdrmarlo14 күн бұрын

    Watched 'till the end and thought "Wubuntu"

  • @franciscovarela7127
    @franciscovarela712714 күн бұрын

    Thunk!

  • @BanazirGalpsi1968
    @BanazirGalpsi196814 күн бұрын

    PCBway made the board for commander x 16

  • @GeoNeilUK
    @GeoNeilUK14 күн бұрын

    Microsoft have made a last gasp at a proprietary standard with UWP from Windows 8 onwards, I'm not sure if Wine support that yet. I think the XBOX One and XBOX Series consoles are based on UWP too. Tough to be honest, a lot of the apps on the Microsoft Store are just Win32 apps in an MSIX installer.

  • @alexandrustefanmiron7723
    @alexandrustefanmiron772314 күн бұрын

    The beer before wine!

  • @Angular777
    @Angular777Күн бұрын

    I remember alternate facts! Windows ME became the defacto OS :)

  • @noahk1720
    @noahk172014 күн бұрын

    You really piqued my interest when you said that "Azure mostly runs Linux", and "Microsoft ported their Hyper-V hypervisor platform to Linux". I don't think that's correct...all I was able to find is evidence to the contrary, that the Azure Cloud Host is more or less a typical Hyper-V server (i.e. Hyper-V is the type 1 hypervisor, managed by NT running atop) with some added APIs and the barest of minimum Win32 APIs to run a CMD window.

  • @GoogleDoesEvil

    @GoogleDoesEvil

    9 күн бұрын

    You're right

  • @gavinguy148
    @gavinguy14814 күн бұрын

    I’m still surprised the eu didn’t step in with windows 11 and it’s hardware compatibility requirements that have been proved time and time again to be fake limitations. Microsoft circle of life!

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    14 күн бұрын

    Saddly regualators seem to always lag about a decade behind. They never get ahead of these things. Look how long its taken the EU to finally deal with the app store situation on iPhones.

  • @CrackDavidson1

    @CrackDavidson1

    14 күн бұрын

    Only after the e-waste problem becomes clearly noticeable in the waste management sector *maybe* then? But kind of late as people and companies already have their new HW... :/

  • @vanCaldenborgh
    @vanCaldenborgh14 күн бұрын

    Strange, the "thumbs up" button is missing on my screen, but I just clicked at the place where I was expecting it, left from the "likes" counter, ...and it worked!

  • @qwertykeyboard5901
    @qwertykeyboard59014 күн бұрын

    7:57 Tfw dynamic recompiler.

  • @EtherRainbow
    @EtherRainbow11 күн бұрын

    only video criticism of this video is the transition static noise is way too loud

  • @MostlyPennyCat
    @MostlyPennyCat10 күн бұрын

    Ah yes, embrace, extend and extinguish.

  • @markwarner5554
    @markwarner555414 күн бұрын

    Microsoft has been decoupling windows user space from kernal space for a while, so I think windows will eventually run on a Linux kernel.

  • @davidsmith7208
    @davidsmith72088 күн бұрын

    Additional comment regarding updates: Windows has traumatized people regarding updates. They get ambushed while they're working, when they have to restart, when they turn their computers on. They lose 20,40 minutes, even hours of work for updates that too frequently completely break their system. Whenever anyone asks me about updates, or recoils about an update notice, I'll tell them there's nothing to fear. I'll then offer, and show them, by running an update. This is almost invariably met with shock and wonder. The most powerful weapon against update anxiety, in my humble opinion, is a demonstration of an update. Quickly completed, done while work is being done, and no reboot afterward, as this is not frequently needed. Try it.🎉

  • @judewestburner
    @judewestburner14 күн бұрын

    Microsoft were playing the long game Sun and Next didn't know they were in. They brought out these modern computers doing all the stuff you want to do, whereas Microsoft were waiting for commodity hardware to get good enough and put their efforts into that knowing the high end would get eaten up.

  • @georgerogers1166

    @georgerogers1166

    14 күн бұрын

    BSDi lawsuit killed it.

  • @OldAussieAds
    @OldAussieAds9 күн бұрын

    It would be a very interesting future where Microsoft give up their OS business to a customised Linux. I doubt it will happen (at least any time soon) but it’s certainly an interesting theory.

  • @NoobsDeSroobs
    @NoobsDeSroobs5 күн бұрын

    Wabe is not harmony. It means refinement, or a refined taste, where you see the beauty of poverty and simplicity.

  • @yuho865
    @yuho86514 күн бұрын

    ow that noise burst at 1:43 are you trying to deafen people

  • @sundhaug92
    @sundhaug9214 күн бұрын

    24:15 Microsoft actually has multiple Linux-distros, and are part of the Linux foundation

  • @techkev140
    @techkev14012 күн бұрын

    Great video as usual. The future could have been very different if those pesky money seekers had not stopped the push for an open API! For instance, we would never have seen this video had it happened... because the AI machine apocalypse would have already happened. One API to rule them all. 🙃

  • @WoodsPrecisionArms
    @WoodsPrecisionArms14 күн бұрын

    You forgot Tandy Deskmate LMAO

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    14 күн бұрын

    More repressed the memories of 😁

  • @WoodsPrecisionArms

    @WoodsPrecisionArms

    14 күн бұрын

    @@RetroBytesUK lol to be honest for what it “was” it wasn’t horrible per say - it had a recording and music program because the Tandy tl/2 had a built in sound card (actually it was a direct soldered on add on card) had a word processor and a paint program, calendar, etc etc for what it was anyways but still incredibly cheesy by 286 day standards lol

  • @playswithblades
    @playswithblades14 күн бұрын

    I am so grateful you released a video I can enjoy on my earphones while my roomate went full swine mode slurping and chewing like a pig on his dinner. You, dear sir, just prevented a murder. Thank you. Edit: Getting ran over by a motorbike is not bad, getting ran over by a SUV is not bad for us who are into that kind of thing, but I'll definitely agree that getting ran over by a 20 ton truck sucks. Bigtime. Large tractors too. As a person who enjoys getting ran over by vehicles because, why not, I do not approve this comparison. Motorbikes and normal cars (tesla cybertruck sucks, I do not want to feel another one of those damn things ever again), are much more like windows 98SE than Windows 1.0 (50ccm motorbike). I would compare windows 11 experience to getting ran over by a 20 ton truck. Maybe that would be fair. And this piece of shit is still slurping soup. Need to restart the video.

  • @SL4RK
    @SL4RK14 күн бұрын

    Photoshop on unix 0_o It's probably the most impossible and bizarre thing to do

  • @paul_boddie

    @paul_boddie

    14 күн бұрын

    Not really. A bunch of applications were available from companies that later became big names, if they weren't already. And, of course, Photoshop runs on the modern Mac OS which is a Unix system.

  • @alexevansuk
    @alexevansuk8 күн бұрын

    We're now at a point where we can do the same thing without overpriced sun kit. That said...

  • @succuvamp_anna
    @succuvamp_anna14 күн бұрын

    Just letting ya know for the future. Wabi is pronounced like. WA as it sounds in WAter Bi you said that part right. Japanese can be Weird like that.

  • @RetroBytesUK

    @RetroBytesUK

    14 күн бұрын

    Thanks for letting me know, I knew I would not pronounce it correctly.

  • @esra_erimez
    @esra_erimez14 күн бұрын

    Fun fact: StarOffice would eventually become LibreOffice

  • @BlaBla-pf8mf
    @BlaBla-pf8mf14 күн бұрын

    Sun did port SunOS on the Sun386i (and the never released Sun486i) PC in 1989 before Windows 3.0 was released in 1990 but it never took off. Some people overstate the general public desire for a Unix-like OS. MS DOS and Windows were good enough and cheap enough for most users. In fact Microsoft had their own licensed Unix version for x86 computers called Xenix but they sold it in 1987 because it was not profitable. Funny enough it ended up being merged by Sun back in Unix.

  • @AnnatarTheMaia

    @AnnatarTheMaia

    14 күн бұрын

    Xenix was never merged into UNIX by Sun; Sun had a direct agreement with AT&T, which allowed them to base Solaris 2.5 and onwards directly on AT&T System V Release 4.0 code. They didn't have to go anywhere else, they got the real McCoy to build Solaris. I still find tons of "Copyright 19## AT&T" or "This is proprietary unpublished work of AT&T" in the code when I need to work on something inside of Solaris 10 or illumos.

  • @ihardcas
    @ihardcas14 күн бұрын

    18:16 Flag upside down 😦

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