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{{OSinfobox | {{OSinfobox | ||
| | |image = | ||
| | |||
| | |cname = Bell Labs Unix | ||
| | |alias = UNIX, Unix-sama, UNICS | ||
| | |hname = Eunice Bell | ||
| | |debut = Feb 2007 (preconcept), Sep 2007 (finished) | ||
|height = 153 cm (5'0") | |||
|haircolor= purple | |||
|eyecolor= light blue | |||
|weapon = fire magic, various sorcery techniques, metal staff | |||
|apfaction = [[Linux Unix Consortium]] | |||
|lineage= Unix (matriarch/founder) | |||
|rival= Various | |||
|osper = (Bell Labs) Unix | |||
|osdev = Bell Labs, ATT | |||
|reldate = Summer 1969 | |||
|lastrel = Version 10, 1989 | |||
}} | |||
==Technical details== | ==Technical details== | ||
Unix was originally developed in 1969 by AT&T Bell Labs employees Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie and Douglas McIlroy. It was originally developed to run on the PDP-7, a small and underpowered minicomputer. Because of its sparse development conditions, Unix was a radical departure from OS designs of the day; built to be small, flexible and highly portable. From the PDP-7 it was ported to the PDP-11 and in 1973 was rewritten entirely in C. AT&T had been forbidden to enter the computer industry by an anti-trust lawsuit, and thus couldn't sell Unix as a product; but this didn’t stop its creators from sending out Unix tapes and source code to those who asked. Because of this, Unix quickly caught on as an academia, with people the world over modifying and creating new versions. | Unix was originally developed in 1969 by AT&T Bell Labs employees Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie and Douglas McIlroy. It was originally developed to run on the PDP-7, a small and underpowered minicomputer. Because of its sparse development conditions, Unix was a radical departure from OS designs of the day; built to be small, flexible and highly portable. From the PDP-7 it was ported to the PDP-11 and in 1973 was rewritten entirely in C. AT&T had been forbidden to enter the computer industry by an anti-trust lawsuit, and thus couldn't sell Unix as a product; but this didn’t stop its creators from sending out Unix tapes and source code to those who asked. Because of this, Unix quickly caught on as an academia, with people the world over modifying and creating new versions. |