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Is OS/2 Coming Back?

mstansberry writes "Is IBM considering relaunching OS/2? One source close to IBM says Big Blue plans to repurpose OS/2 services atop a Linux core. IT managers ask, why now?" Hey, back in simpler times OS/2 was super badass. Both of the guys who ran it were hard core.

6 of 432 comments (clear)

  1. Those Two Guys by technomancerX · · Score: 5, Informative

    You seem to miss the thousands of banks and financial institutions that were using it as well. OS/2 was far more prevalent in large businesses than it ever was with home users.

    --
    .technomancer
  2. OS/2 never went away by MrEricSir · · Score: 5, Informative

    OS/2 is still running ATMs, train systems, all kinds of important things. It never went away.

    --
    There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
  3. Re:An updated Workplace Shell would be great by Improv · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'd be wary of suggesting that we ever will or should have an official desktop. Some competition and cross-pollination helps us share interface ideas that work after having separate communities really find out what doesn't. Those of us who actually used OS/2 generally also find the very idea of "IBM will save us" to be ridiculous. IBM long neglected, ignored, and occasionally kicked the OS/2 community. They're not really the poster child for sanity. We liked the product, but were very wary of big blue itself.

    Also, as a general hint to other people, whenever somebody says "let's face it", it's a good clue that they're being a douche. It's an empty, self-congratulatory phrase.

    --
    For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
  4. My OS/2 story by boristdog · · Score: 4, Informative

    When I worked for the state there was a company contracted to develop a whole suite of Windows applications to move us off the old VAX green-screen interfaces into the modern world. Most of the department ran on Windows NT 4.

    So naturally, the contractor developed all of their applications on a Windows NT 3.51 emulator running under OS/2.

    Aaaaand after millions of dollars spent, the contractor demonstrated their applications (working flawlessly under the emulator in OS/2) got their money and high-tailed it, leaving us IT schlubs to implement the applications. All the apps immediately crashed when we attempted to run them in the real NT 4 environment. We never did get them working, except on the few workstations actually running OS/2 with an NT emulator.

    Your tax dollars at work. Remember kids, watch your specifications when hiring a contractor!

  5. Re:EA corruption by Warphammer · · Score: 5, Informative

    Humor value noted, but for those wondering, he's talking about Extended Attributes, the big database of stuff about files, stored on HPFS. Kind of like a Resource Fork on a Mac file. EA corruption was one of the more annoying things you'd have to deal with on an OS/2 system. Examples of EA data would include the file's icon, data type (which would refer back to which program to open it), etc. Without it, a lot of the system would get really unhappy. There was even a hack IBM came up with to let you have EAs on FAT volumes, but that was a little less nice.

  6. Everyone has used OS/2. They just don't know it. by The+Breeze · · Score: 4, Informative

    Up until rather recently, a large majority of bank ATM's ran OS/2.

    Many call centers ran software that used OS/2.

    OS/2's attempt to reach the consumer market were laughable - they sponsored the OS/2 Fiesta Bowl in the 1990's, without explaining to the public what OS/2 even was - but the software was everywhere in the corporate world it seemed. (for those slashdotters who don't know what the Fiesta Bowl is, it's one of the biggest college football ball games.)

    Ford car dealerships ran a satelite uplink system that required OS/2.

    I used it to ran a multiline BBS. It was good stuff. Even today, many of the guts (and filenames) of Windows stem from MS's long ago partnership with IBM....the more stable portions of Windows.

    Not sure what the relevance of it today would be, but it was more widespread than you might think.