T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2211.1 | | CSC32::J_PARSONS | Like Lesser Birds on the 4 Winds... | Mon Feb 06 1989 22:02 | 13 |
| I rushed back to the Amiga conference to post this right after I
read it but Dave beat me to it....
I called the company mentioned in this post and this product looks
to be for real; they are just starting beta test right now (and
still looking for additional sites, although they appear to be looking
more for serious business/corporate users than hobbyists). The person
I talked to didn't have any information on availability date or
pricing but was happy to take my name and address and said she'd
send their technical literature as soon as it's ready. She did indicate
that it would NOT be a requirement to have any kind of ethernet
board to run their software; they will support links made through
the serial port.
|
2211.2 | | WJG::GUINEAU | | Tue Feb 07 1989 07:51 | 6 |
| You mean you could take 2 Amiga's, connect a cable between thier serial ports
and run DECNET?
That would be neat!
John
|
2211.3 | If it's DECnet...and this *is* DEC...shouldn't someone here know? | GRYHWK::WITHERS | No life I know can compare with pure imagination.. | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:47 | 7 |
| If they are making DECnet/Amiga don't they have to Ok the effort
through us? (using "us" as a eupamism (sp) for DEC in general) If so,
they would have to get some sort of license to call it "DECnet
compatiable" and somewhere internally *someone* should have some info?
George
|
2211.4 | no license needed | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:57 | 6 |
| They don't need a license from DEC to build a DECnet-compatible product
any more than DEC needs a license from IBM to build a Bisync or SNA-
compatible product, or GTE needs a license from AT&T to build a
telephone-compatible product. To require a license would invite
stifling of competition by burdensom licensing conditions.
John Sauter
|
2211.5 | License was a poor choice of word.. | GRYHWK::WITHERS | No life I know can compare with pure imagination.. | Tue Feb 07 1989 13:43 | 13 |
| Re: .4 (John)
I didn't mean on the general protocol, what I meant was on (at least)
the utilities such as Mail, etc. Whatever. Also, license might not
have been the right word. Agreement, perhaps. I worked for a company
and Apollo wrote software allowing one of our boards to run on thier
machine under thier software. They contacted us and gave us
information, etc. and was wondering if somewhere in the DECnet group
thier might be some spec mailed from this company about thier net
product forthcoming.
George
|
2211.6 | There's precedent | LEVERS::PLOUFF | Semipro Semiologist | Tue Feb 07 1989 15:07 | 26 |
| Re: licenses, agreements, etc.
One of the original DECnet developers runs his own company now which
ports DECnet to myriad machines. Haven't heard that he has a license
or agreement with us. Internally...
A year ago there was a big push from the field to get various MS-DOS
machines approved for DECnet-DOS. At that time only Big Blue and
one or two other brands were supported, even though almost any MS-DOS
machine could run it successfully. Since that time the list of
supported PC vendors has grown slowly.
For the Macintosh, where Digital is apparently not doing any Mac-native
software development, I think there is some sort of formal support for
independent software vendors developing DECnet-compatible applications.
I also think there is some sort of program office with a real budget.
Since Amiga has sold about half the number of machines as Macintosh,
and sells worldwide at a roughly equal rate, I wondered whether
there should be Digital support for Amiga networking. A few months
back I asked a VP in NAC what was needed to support another brand
of personal computer, besides a clear business benefit to Digital.
He said, "One million units sold."
What reader of this notesfile is ready to champion an official support
program, convince management, etc.?
|
2211.7 | protocoll is everything | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Feb 07 1989 16:56 | 15 |
| Documents which describe the DECnet protocols (some of them, anyway)
are in the SDC and can be purchased by anybody. The important part of
the utilities is their protocols; I wouldn't _want_ the same human
interface on an Amiga as VMS offers!
The person referred to in .6 is Stu Wecker. I worked with him in the
early days of DECnet, and I can't imagine him paying DEC a license fee
for any of his products.
While it would be helpful to any DECnet implementor to get assistance
from Digital, it isn't necessary. If you don't want to buy the books
you can always hook a line analyzer to a couple of DEC products. The
protocol isn't very hard to deduce, if you are at all familiar with the
OSI work.
John Sauter
|
2211.8 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Tue Feb 07 1989 19:38 | 13 |
| re:.6
It will probably take more than a champion and a 1 million installed
base. It needs customers with real $$$ asking for it to be included
under the NAS program. TSSnet and other DECnet implementations for
the Mac fit under that somehow. DECnet-DOS exists because of an
installed base of over 10 million. The Mac market is much smaller.
The Amiga market....
The big question is if this is just going to be a quick port of
TSSnet or an Amigaized multitasking version. Endnode only?
-Dave
|
2211.9 | 2� worth | NAC::BRANNON | value added | Tue Feb 07 1989 21:34 | 19 |
| re .6:
clone support is growing slowly because of tight budgets and
the legal risks involved with saying a particular clone is
"supported" without adequate testing.
We have yet to find the mythical 100% compatible.
Getting a good definition for what "supported" means is also an
interesting exercise. 8^)
The current desktop strategy is one of accomodation, cost cutting,
and reducing risk. DECnet-MAC would have been fun to develop, but
since there were already vendors offering something similar...
I suspect the same will happen for DECnet-Amiga, someday.
And yes, it is possible to run DECnet between two systems at home
over a serial connection. I had a Rainbow and a Compaq Plus hooked
up that way for awhile. Both DECnet endnodes.
dennis (DECnet-DOS engineering)
|
2211.10 | DEC sees Macs as rotten apples | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Wed Feb 15 1989 19:44 | 17 |
| Re: .8
> [For DECnet to be done by DEC for a non-DEC machine:]
> It needs customers with real $$$ asking for it to be included
> under the NAS program. TSSnet and other DECnet implementations for
> the Mac fit under that somehow.
Actually, the Mac doesn't seem to have fit that description. The DEC/Apple
joint-development deal is mostly dead: It was a good deal for Apple
and a bad deal for DEC. It really isn't such a great idea for DEC
to encourage our customers to by someone else's products in preference
to DEC pcs and terminals.
A study proved to DEC that no one buys a VAX because they have a
bunch of Macs and the VAX will talk to them. On the other hand, it
is true that people who own a VAX will buy Macs if the VAX will
talk to them.
|