ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

All content for

'project monterey'.

20 results. Displaying: 1-20




Unix Forum Cheers Linux

News While the partners involved in the Monterey Project -- the initiative between SCO, IBM, Intel, Sequent Computer and Compaq Computer to create a high-volume unified UNIX -- were upbeat on Monterey's prospects, they still had Linux on the brain.

[August 23, 1999, 12:15]

IBM Updates Unix, Linux Strategies

News The Monterey Project participants have said they expect to deliver Monterey 64 by the third quarter of next year. The 4.3.3 release is the first that IBM will claim includes some functionality from the forthcoming Monterey 64 operating system.

[September 13, 1999, 14:39]

SCO Group Unveils Linux For Itanium

News Operating systems for Intel's high-end Itanium chip family are a sore point for SCO, which had collaborated with IBM on an Itanium version of SCO's UnixWare called Project Monterey. But IBM abandoned Project Monterey in favour of Linux, a move that...

[April 16, 2003, 7:39]

Intellectual Property Battles Will Wound Linux

News Whereas a 64-bit version of Unix (an Intel-compatible one at that) may have been the focus of Project Monterey, the 32- and 64-bit versions of Linux will be front and centre in the patent infringement suit.

[June 18, 2003, 16:05]

LinuxWorld: Sun Asks IBM To Preload Solaris

News With Intel's blessing, Sequent ended its relationship with Compaq Computer on Digital Unix to join Project Monterey. However, the day before Sun launched Solaris 7, its first 64-bit operating system, IBM announced Project Monterey -- a shrink...

[August 11, 1999, 10:48]

SCO Puts Focus On Countertop

News The hype over Linux in the late 90s was such that IBM ditched UnixWare from its unified Unix initiative called Project Monterey in favour of the open source upstart. Project Monterey aimed to create a Unix platform that would span the 32-bit and 64...

[October 3, 2002, 14:48]

Itanium Delay: Blessing In Disguise?

News IBM released a first beta of Project Monterey in the April/May timeframe, and since that time, it has provided regular updates to hardware and software makers who are working with IBM on Monterey. IBM also claims to be on track with its 64-bit...

[July 21, 2000, 9:55]

Caldera Loads Linux Apps On UnixWare

News IBM's original strategy -- called Project Monterey -- had been to unify AIX with Sequent's Dynix/ptx operating system and UnixWare. However, the explosion in popularity of Linux throughout 1999 and 2000 prompted IBM to quietly ditch Project...

[March 27, 2001, 12:21]

Linux: Itanium's Great 64-bit Hope?

News This week at the Intel Developer Forum, IBM announced that the Project Monterey team (IBM, the Santa Cruz Operation and Intel) will have an alpha version of Monterey ready to deliver to developers on 29 February.

[February 17, 2000, 9:34]

Source For 64-bit Linux Released

News IBM and SCO are working on Project Monterey. So what do you get when you get so many typically adversarial hardware vendors in one project? The Trillian project on Wednesday released its code to the open-source community.

[February 3, 2000, 9:55]

Microsoft: I'll Show You Mine

News Others include The Trillian Project's IA-64 Linux; IBM and The Santa Cruz Operation's Project Monterey; and Sun Microsystems's 64-bit Solaris on Intel port. In a corner of their booth at the Las Vegas Convention Centre, Microsoft officials were...

[May 10, 2000, 8:39]

Intel - Venture Investments To Boost IA-64

News Project Monterey from IBM also will figure into the mix. As part of the Intel 64 Fund, Lutris must work with IBM on Java and the Trillian project on Linux. Dozens of high-tech companies, venture firms and business conglomerates are flooding the...

[April 4, 2000, 11:35]

Sequent Joins IBM's Empire

News IBM has also said it plans to speed up development of Project Monterey, the plan for a converged Unix based on SCO Unix, IBM AIX and Sequent Dynix/ptx. Sequent is now a wholly-owned subsidiary of IBM and IBM has rights to market Numa-Q 1000 and...

[October 1, 1999, 15:17]

HP Boosts Unix For Itanium

News IBM decided against selling or supporting AIX 5L for Itanium, a product that was the result of a years-long collaboration project code-named Monterey. Hewlett-Packard is pressing its Unix advantage for Intel's Itanium 2, announcing advanced...

[June 10, 2002, 9:58]

IBM Preloads Linux On Its Servers

News Likely candidates include The Santa Cruz Operation's UnixWare and IBM/SCO's Project Monterey IA-64 Unix offering that is under development. Previously IBM has made Linux available on Netfinity systems, but only through its reseller partners.

[April 25, 2000, 9:10]

Save The Last Dance For SCO

Leader Not only is SCO not prevailing in its primary goal of getting IBM to say sorry for Project Monterey, it hasn't even proved ownership of the Unix rights it claims are being violated. Reality and SCO have not, of late, been dancing arm in arm.

[August 10, 2005, 14:35]

SCO's Outlook Is A Bleak House

Leader Forget Darl McBride's sabre rattling about the GPL being against the US constitution: the case is as it seemed when everything kicked off in 2003, a result of SCO's affronted sensibilities at the way IBM ditched Project Monterey.

[January 24, 2005, 11:50]

Veitch Speaks: Let's Stay Together In 1999

News Think also about Sequent, which is now to contribute towards Windows 2000 and to the Monterey project for a more orderly Unix - even if that latter piece of realpolitik won't impress its previous dancing partners, the Digital Unix folk.

[January 9, 1999, 5:27]

SCO Admits It May Fold

News The filing also confirmed that the judge's decision had scuppered most of SCO's claims against IBM — it had claimed that IBM's inclusion of Unix code in Linux infringed upon SCO's intellectual property — although SCO still intends to pursue a...

[September 19, 2007, 16:23]

Is Roaming Coming To Wi-Fi?

News He's attending a meeting this week of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) in Monterey, California, held to discuss how to jumpstart Wi-Fi roaming. This could then be used in such industry efforts as Project Rainbow, a joint...

[September 11, 2002, 8:10]