Software:3DA

From HandWiki
Short description: Mid-1990s Unix development alliance

3DA was an alliance formed between The Santa Cruz Operation (SCO) and Hewlett-Packard (HP) in September 1995.[1] Its purpose was to unify SCO's OpenServer product, UnixWare (newly acquired from Novell), and HP-UX from HP; the resulting product would then become the de facto Unix standard for both existing x86 systems and the upcoming IA-64 processor architecture from Intel.

In September 1996, SCO announced that they were offering a "code-level preview" of the system, codenamed Gemini.[2]

By 1998 the alliance had ground to a halt, setting the stage for Project Monterey.[3]

References

  1. "HP, Novell and SCO To Deliver High-Volume UNIX OS With Advanced Network And Enterprise Services" (Press release). Hewlett-Packard Company; Novell; SCO. September 20, 1995. Archived from the original on 23 January 2007. Retrieved 2007-01-23.
  2. Atanu Roy (1996-09-24). "SCO Previews Gemini, The SCO-HP 64-bit Unix". Newsbytes. http://w3.redcom.ru/docs/newsbytes/0924.txt. 
  3. "SCO Admits Past Mistakes, Seeks Glory In Merced". Computergram International. 1998-03-16. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0CGN/is_n3368/ai_20421851. "Santa Cruz Operation Inc SVP marketing Ray Anderson's frank about mistakes the company made since it acquired Unix from Novell Inc - including the corpse of the grand 3DA Unix alliance with Hewlett-Packard Co ..."