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  • From: "Liam R. E. Quin" <liam@f...>
  • To: Michael Kay <mike@s...>
  • Date: Sat, 08 Jan 2022 22:02:20 -0500

On Thu, 2022-01-06 at 09:17 +0000, Michael Kay wrote:
> 
> > 
> > A less obvious one is that XML forced a lot of organizations to
> > accept
> > open source code for the first time, and made it become "normal".
> 
> They had been using the UNIX and TCP/IP infrastructure for a long
> time before, but I guess they didn't think of it as open source
> because it came bundled with the hardware.

In most cases it wasn't - Solaris, Ultrix, AIX, HP/UX, and more, all
were closed-source. They were open specs for APIs at various levels
(e.g. posix) which helped a lot.

TCP/IP was (is) a set of specifications, not an implementation.

Liam

-- 
Liam Quin, https://www.delightfulcomputing.com/
Available for XML/Document/Information Architecture/XSLT/
XSL/XQuery/Web/Text Processing/A11Y training, work & consulting.
Barefoot Web-slave, antique illustrations:  http://www.fromoldbooks.org



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