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Santa Cruz Operation

The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. (usually known as SCO,[1] pronounced either as individual letters or as a word) was an American software company, based in Santa Cruz, California, that was best known for selling three Unix operating system variants for Intel x86 processors: Xenix, SCO UNIX (later known as SCO OpenDesktop and SCO OpenServer), and UnixWare.

The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.
Company typePrivate (until 1993)
Public (after 1993)
Nasdaq: SCOC
IndustryComputer software
Founded1979
Founder
  • Larry Michels
  • Doug Michels
Defunct2001
Fate2001, sold off Unix assets and renamed as Tarantella, Inc.
SuccessorTarantella, Inc.
Headquarters,
United States
Number of locations
Key people
  • Larry Michels
  • Lars Turndal
  • Alok Mohan
  • Doug Michels
Products
Revenue$224 million (peak, 1999)
Number of employees
1,300 (peak, 1991)
Websitewww.sco.com
Commemorative plaque celebrating twenty years in business for Santa Cruz Operation, listing important milestones along the way

SCO was founded in 1979 by Larry Michels and his son Doug Michels and began as a consulting and Unix porting company. An early involvement with Microsoft led to SCO making a product out of Xenix on Intel-based PCs. The fundamental insight that led to SCO's success was that there was a large market for a standard, "open systems" operating system on commodity microprocessor hardware that would give business applications computing power and throughput that previously was only possible with considerably more expensive minicomputers. SCO built a large community of value-added resellers that would eventually become 15,000 strong and many of its sales to small and medium-sized businesses went through those resellers. This community was exemplified by the annual SCO Forum conference, held in a scenic setting that reflected the company's Santa Cruz culture. SCO also had corporate customers in the replicated sites space, where a SCO-based system was deployed in each of a retail or restaurant chain's stores.

Despite seeing rapid growth in terms of revenues, SCO tended to have high research and development costs and was never consistently profitable either before or after going public in 1993. SCO bought two former Xenix outfits, the Software Products Group within Logica in 1986 and HCR Corporation in 1990, thereby gaining development offices in Watford, England and Toronto, Canada. During the mid-1990s, SCO acquired two further UK companies, IXI Limited in Cambridge and Visionware in Leeds, which led to a suite of client-to-Unix integration products and then the Tarantella product line. SCO's operating system technology moved from Xenix to System V Release 3 as reflected by the products SCO Open Desktop and SCO OpenServer. In 1995, SCO bought the System V Release 4 and UnixWare business from Novell and, in collaboration with several hardware partners, the New Jersey development office it gained in the deal led a series of enhancements to the UnixWare product aimed at the high-end enterprise and data center spaces.

Beginning in the late 1990s, SCO faced increasingly severe competitive pressure, on one side from Microsoft's Windows NT and its successors and on the other side from the free and open source Linux. In 2001, the Santa Cruz Operation sold its rights to Unix and its Unix divisions to Caldera Systems. After that the corporation retained only its Tarantella product line, and changed its name to Tarantella, Inc. Caldera Systems became Caldera International and then changed its name to The SCO Group, which has created some confusion between the two companies. The company described here is the original Santa Cruz Operation. Although generally referred to simply as "SCO" up to 2001, it is now sometimes referred to as "old SCO", "Santa Cruz", or "SCO Classic" to distinguish it from "The SCO Group" to whom the U.S. trademark "SCO" was transferred.[2]

Early history edit

Origin edit

 
The origins of the company and its culture came in part from the University of California, Santa Cruz, shown here in 1980.

SCO was founded in 1979 in Santa Cruz, California, by Larry Michels and his son Doug Michels as a computer consulting company that focused on both technology and management considerations.[3] Larry Michels, 48 years old at the time, was an electrical engineer who had gone into the aerospace industry in Los Angeles.[4] He had then founded a credit verification company, Credifier Corporation, which he sold to TRW Inc., for whom he subsequently served as a vice president for ten years.[5] (Larry Michels was first cousin of another technology entrepreneur, Allen Michels.[6]) Towards the end of that time, Michels became head of the Advanced Products Laboratory for TRW Electronics,[7] and relocated to Santa Cruz to run it remotely from there.[8][9]

As part of this,[10] Michels was involved with a telephony business, TRW Vidar. This was a company, based in Mountain View, California, that TRW had acquired and that was a part of TRW Electronics.[11] TRW Vidar was a pioneer in digital telephone switches,[12] and also an early user of Version 6 Unix in its development environment.[13] Michels felt that TRW as a whole did not understand the rapid change that computers were bringing to businesses or what it had with Vidar – "They thought they were buying a telephony business, they thought that telephony was telephony, but they really were computers. Unless you approached them as being computers, you didn't end up with anything."[10] He then left TRW to do management consulting work,[4] thinking, as he later said, that "if TRW was having so much trouble, it was probably an interesting business [helping companies] go about making these transitions."[10] As a result of this connection, some have considered The Santa Cruz Operation to have been an offshoot of TRW Vidar.[14]

Doug Michels, 25 years old at the time,[4] had graduated from the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1976 with a degree from their department of computer and information science.[8] He had then started his own consulting operation, focusing on technical work.[4]

The two saw some commonalities in their consulting endeavors and decided to join forces to reduce overhead.[4] They chose to stay in Santa Cruz both because of the relaxed lifestyle there and because the university would provide a ready supply of technically suitable employees.[15][6] By some sources The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. was incorporated in January 1979.[16] The name came from Larry Michels' time as head of the TRW advanced research group, when the remote outpost had been known as 'the Santa Cruz operation'.[8] The Michelses decided to use that for the name of their new firm,[8] and the name was retained in the years that would follow because it told people where they were coming from.[17]

Unix porting company edit

 
SCO's first offices were in downtown Santa Cruz, about 25 of a mile distant along the right side of this viewpoint

Offices for the new firm were established at 500 Chestnut Street in the downtown area of Santa Cruz.[18][17] But as Doug Michels conceded in a 2006 interview, in terms of what they would be doing, "We didn't really have an idea."[19] Pure consulting work held little ongoing appeal,[15] and the notion of helping large businesses manage rapid technological change proved difficult in practice.[10]

However, the Michelses soon became intrigued by the microprocessor revolution then underway, in which computer systems based on processors such as the Intel 8080 or the Zilog Z80 could be put together much quicker than the minicomputers of the past.[19] In the consulting work they did, SCO was dealing with various resellers and small time-sharing companies in helping those companies formulate their technology strategies.[19] The people at SCO had, and further acquired, a familiarity with the Unix operating system and its potential for use in the business world.[10][3] By early 1981, SCO was selling a report analyzing Unix features and availability based on a poll it had taken of over sixty members of the /usr/group association.[18]

Moreover, people at SCO realized that since Unix was portable and not controlled by any hardware manufacturer, use of it could allow microprocessor-based system manufacturers to avoid having to develop a proprietary operating system of their own, which they had neither the time nor the expertise to do.[19] Accordingly, the company decided to focus on custom jobs of porting the Unix system and applications that ran on it.[3]Eric S. Raymond, in his book The Art of Unix Programming (which places the start of SCO in 1978), calls SCO the "first Unix company",[20] although Interactive Systems Corporation, which put out the first commercial Unix release (as a base for office automation systems) in 1977, perhaps has a stronger case.[21][22]

The first Unix-based operating system that SCO made is for the PDP-11, is named DYNIX (not to be confused with a same-named Unix variant later made by Sequent Computer Systems), and is based on Seventh Edition Unix.[3] It supports the Tymshare service and by early 1981 was included in Tymshare's DYNASTY computer system offering.[23][24] SCO also did a Unix port to the LSI-11 variant of the PDP-11.[3]

Xenix is a Seventh Edition Unix-based version of the operating system that Microsoft worked on, initially for the PDP-11.[3] SCO first began working with Xenix in 1981.[8] In 1982, Microsoft and SCO forged a joint agreement for development and technology exchange, with the two companies' engineers working together on improvements to Xenix.[3] (Microsoft was still a small company at the time, with perhaps 25 or 50 employees.[19]) Microsoft and SCO then further engaged Human Computing Resources in Canada, and the Software Products Group within Logica in the United Kingdom, as part of making further improvements to Xenix and porting Xenix to other platforms.[3] In doing so, Microsoft gave HCR and Logica the rights to do Xenix ports and license Xenix binaries in those territories.[19]

In 1983, SCO made a technically difficult port of Xenix to the unmapped Intel 8086 processor (earlier 8086 Xenix ports required an off-chip MMU) and licensed rights from Microsoft to be able to ship its packaged Unix system, Xenix, for the IBM PC XT.[25] This work takes advantage of earlier porting and compilers work that Altos Computer Systems had done for the mapped 16-bit Intel architecture.[19] The resulting system is binary compatible with, and can run applications built for, Altos Xenix systems, and was a successful venture for SCO.[19]

 
Museum label for the Apple Lisa notes that it could run Xenix; that was SCO's first shrink-wrapped product.

Somewhat in parallel with that, SCO and Microsoft also developed the 68000-based Xenix port for the Apple Lisa.[3] It has multiuser capability as well as support for virtual terminals for single users.[26] SCO also sold applications for Xenix on Lisa, including a Uniplex word processor, the Multiplan spreadsheet from Microsoft, Level II COBOL from Micro Focus, and the Informix database software from Relational Database Systems.[26][27][28] While the Lisa was not a success in the personal computer marketplace, its powerful-for-its-price-point processor combined with a relatively inexpensive operating system gave third-party vendors an attractive platform for building systems to compete with minicomputers, and SCO sold several thousand copies of Xenix for the Lisa.[19] This was the first shrink-wrapped binary product sold by SCO, and its sales convinced SCO of the potential of that kind of product.[3]

A third target of SCO's Xenix porting work was the DEC Professional 350.[27] As Larry Michels said in early 1984, "SCO will continue offering custom XENIX adaptions to the large OEM market – the Original Equipment Manufacturers – who make up SCO's established customer base."[27] SCO also sold Unix training.[27]

By September 1983, SCO had around 60 employees and was already expanding into a second office, at 1700 Mission Street in Santa Cruz.[17][29] While some of SCO's staff had studied computer science, others were coming from backgrounds in linguistics, sociology, psychology, or business.[17]

Middle history edit

Growth years with Xenix on Intel edit

 
Original company logo

In early 1984, Microsoft and SCO issued a joint announcement about SCO's rights to distribute Xenix within the United States.[27] SCO Xenix for the PC XT shipped sometime in 1984 and contains some enhancements from 4.2BSD Unix, Micnet local area networking, and multiuser support.[3] In 1985, SCO worked with AT&T and Microsoft to test conformance with the System V Interface Definition (SVID), one of the early Unix standardization efforts.[3]

In October 1985, SCO announced the availability of Xenix System V for the Intel 8088-based IBM PC XT and the Intel 80286-based IBM PC AT and IBM PC XT.[30] The product can support ten remote users via serial ports and was sold with optional packages for software development in C or assembly language and for text processing.[30] There had been concern within SCO about the business chances of the 80286 product, since IBM had elected to come to market with their own Unix.[19] But that IBM effort, contracted to Interactive Systems Corporation and called PC/IX, resulted in a product that was unsuccessful.[31]

 
SCO Xenix System V boot-up screen

There had been considerable skepticism in the industry that Unix could ever establish a successful market position on the PC.[26] These included beliefs that Unix was inherently large and complex enough that it needed a minicomputer, the platform on which it had been developed, in order to run effectively.[4] As Larry Michels said in early January 1991, "We had all the problems of being ahead of the market."[6] The company had never been adequately funded, as venture capitalists were unenthused by the idea of Unix on a PC; cash flow problems resulted and the Michelses used much of their personal savings to keep the company in business.[6][4] A key turning point was when Compaq Computer began shipping systems with Unix installed and chose SCO to be their provider.[6]

Larry Michels tended to focus on the business aspects of the company while Doug Michels focused on technology facets; together they became recognized as pioneers of the Unix-on-PC industry.[5] Larry Michels was president of SCO and Doug Michels was, as Larry put it, "the number-two person", usually with the title of executive vice-president, but both employees and outside investors were encouraged to treat the two as an indivisible team.[32]

In December 1986, SCO acquired the Software Products Group division of Logica.[33] It became a wholly owned subsidiary, the Santa Cruz Operation Limited, and the basis for SCO's UK operation,[34][19] with its office subsequently being relocated first to Soho[35] and then to Watford outside London.[36] By 1993, almost half of SCO's revenues came from outside North America, and of that, almost half came from the United Kingdom.[37]

In 1987, the company brought out the SCO Xenix 386 Toolkit, which allowed developers to start coding applications and device drivers for the new Intel 80386 processor in addition to the existing 80286.[3] Later that year, SCO's full release of Xenix for 80386 was made; the chip was powerful enough that Xenix running on it could handle some 30 different users.[15] SCO provided some basic applications with Xenix.[15] But the real value came from the 1,700 other applications that had been developed by value-added resellers (VARs) and independent software vendors (ISVs) for the platform, including such domains as auto parts management, medical accounting, bakery process control, and many others.[15] As one retrospective look characterized it, Xenix served "as a workhorse for small businesses – places where you might find a dozen or so dumb terminals and a couple of printers plugged into a system running [a] small database system. It's simple, small and stable."[38]

 
The main SCO offices, at 425 (left) and 400 Encincal Street in the Harvey West area of Santa Cruz, California, as seen in 1997. Behind the buildings are the hills and Pogonip trails.

By early 1987, SCO had relocated its offices to a building at 400 Encinal Street in an industrial park in the Harvey West area of Santa Cruz[39] (the building had been previously occupied by Intel).[40] As of a year later, SCO employed some 500 people, mostly in Santa Cruz, and had plans to build a new office building there.[15] By early 1991, that new building, 425 Encinal Street, was holding an open house event for prospective employees.[41] The company subsequently established offices in several other buildings in the Harvey West area.[40] These included 324 Encinal Street,[42] 150 Dubois Street,[40] and 100 Pioneer Street.[43]

By the late 1980s, fed by strong computer science program that emphasized Unix design and a robust internship program at SCO, some 50 to 60 percent of SCO employees were UC Santa Cruz graduates.[15][8] SCO now employed some 800 people overall, mostly in its Santa Cruz offices but also in the UK office and in one in Washington, D.C.[8] By early 1989, SCO had sold some 350,000 copies of Xenix in total, mostly through its channel.[8] The company was achieving what the Santa Cruz Sentinel termed "explosive growth".[8]

SCO would subsequently reorient its product on a later technology base.[3] However Xenix comprised the largest installed base of any of the early commercial variants of Unix;[44] it remained a good seller among some customers[45] and SCO releases of Xenix continued until Xenix/386 version 2.3.4 was put out in 1991.[3]

Relations with Microsoft edit

Microsoft's level of commitment to Xenix was always viewed with some suspicion within the industry.[46] It later became clear that by the mid-1980s, Microsoft was losing interest in Xenix from their own business perspective,[20] both due to the cost of licensing it from AT&T and because MS-DOS was rapidly taking off as a product.[47]

In February 1989, it was announced that Microsoft was taking a minority investment in SCO by buying an amount less than 20 percent of that company.[48] The terms of the agreement, which were not publicly disclosed,[8] provided SCO with funds that it acutely needed in order to continue to expand in its rapidly growing market.[49] The deal put a Microsoft executive on SCO's board of directors;[6] that executive, Microsoft's chief financial officer Frank Gaudette, would play an important role in guiding SCO to become a mature enterprise.[50] The deal contained provisions to prevent Microsoft from exercising dominant control over the smaller SCO.[6] By some accounts, the Microsoft board member often had to be asked to leave discussions when the topic became how SCO could best compete with Microsoft.[51] Already on the board since 1987 was another Microsoft veteran, Jim Harris,[50] who had been a leader of Microsoft's OEM sales efforts.[52]

"We had a very long relationship with Microsoft. We were partners, we were competitors, they invested in us, at one point they owned [around 20 percent] of the company, we licensed technology from them, we had lawsuits with them, we had every type of relationship with Microsoft you can imagine."

—Doug Michels, 2012.[53]

Microsoft's motivation for the purchase has been variously explained as a desire to keep a Xenix technology partner,[49] as a hedge against the growth of Unix,[6] and as a hedge against the Open Software Foundation.[47] Yet another explanation was the one given by Larry Michels in 1991, making reference to the SCO Unix product then being sold: "The paradox is if you were Microsoft, Open Desktop isn't something you want to see succeed. But if it doesn't, something else will, and they would rather see Open Desktop than whatever that would be. We pay them royalties."[6]

Later figures stating the amount that Microsoft actually owned included 16 percent,[37][47] 14 percent,[54] and 11 percent.[55] Microsoft did not fully exit its position in SCO until 2000.[47]

In any case, intellectual property rights were not transferred in the 1989 agreement and SCO would continue to pay Microsoft royalties for Xenix and Unix technologies.[6] Not until 1997 was SCO able to reach an agreement with Microsoft that relieved SCO of the obligation to include Microsoft code, and pay royalties on that code regardless of whether it was used or not, in SCO products.[55] And that only came after SCO filed a complaint against Microsoft for violating European Union competition law, a complaint that was ruled valid by the European Commission.[56]

SCO UNIX and Open Desktop edit

Needing to create a product from a more recent branch from the Unix family tree, Unix System V Release 3, SCO, together with Microsoft and Interactive Systems Corporation, worked during 1987 and 1988 to develop the System V/386 Release 3.2 version, which adds the ability to run existing Xenix binary applications on System V without requiring recompilation.[3][44] This capability makes use of the new Intel Binary Compatibility Standard (iBCS), developed by Intel, AT&T, and SCO.[57] The AT&T release of System V/386 Release 3.2 was announced at SCO Forum in 1988, but further work was needed by SCO to incorporate Xenix device drivers before SCO could release it as a product.[58]

SCO UNIX, full name SCO UNIX System V/386 Release 3.2.0, had first customer ship in June 1989;[59] this became the basis for commercial successor to SCO Xenix. Based on an agreement forged with AT&T the previous year, it was also the first SCO operating system to carry the 'Unix' word itself in the product name.[3]

SCO revenues by year (in millions of dollars)[6][60][43][61]

In early 1990, the integrated product SCO Open Desktop began shipping.[62] It features on top of SCO UNIX System V/386 several critical functionalities: a graphical user interface based on the X Window System and Open Software Foundation Motif toolkit; TCP/IP networking; support for the NFS network file system and OS/2 LAN Manager; database support; and Merge 386 for running DOS-based applications.[3][63][6] Regarding OSF Motif, this is its first appearance in a commercial product,[63] and Open Desktop became the first graphical Unix for an Intel 32-bit processor that was packaged in shrink-wrapped form.[64]

SCO used technology partners for much of this work. The graphical desktop itself is the X.desktop one from IXI Limited;[65] The TCP/IP networking stack and NFS implementation come from Lachman Associates,[66] while Open Systems Interconnection software comes from Retix, Inc.[67] The relational database manager included is Ingres.[62] The Merge functionality comes from Locus Computing Corporation.[68]

Version 3.2.2 of SCO Unix and Open Desktop came out in mid-1990; it contains various fixes and improvements for problems found in the field.[45] However, Open Desktop did not make inroads on the personal computer market, as SCO Unix's system resource requirements were strenuous and there were few commonly used PC applications available for it.[64]

Beginning in the late 1980s, AT&T and Sun Microsystems worked on a merge of Xenix, BSD, SunOS, and System V Release 3 features, with the result being known as UNIX System V Release 4.[44] SCO UNIX and Open Desktop remained based on System V Release 3, but eventually added home-grown versions of a number of the features of Release 4.[22]

Initially supplemented by some engineers who transferred from SCO's headquarters operation in Santa Cruz,[34] the ex-Logica group in Watford became one of the major development sites for SCO and over the next few years did the operating system kernel development work behind the subsequent SCO OpenDesktop and SCO OpenServer product releases.[3] It later did engineering work in networking, security, escalations, and other areas, in addition to being the sales, marketing, and customer engineering hub for SCO's EMEA region.[69]

SCO acquired the Toronto, Canada-based HCR Corporation in 1990.[70] Since their interactions in the early Xenix days, HCR had become Canada's leading commercial Unix platform developer.[71] The HCR acquisition allowed SCO to improve its development tools offerings, especially for Open Desktop.[72] SCO Canada took over work on the Microsoft C compiler that dates back to Xenix days but can produce binaries for either Xenix or Unix. In addition, the SCO Open Desktop Development System also offers the AT&T pcc compiler,[73] here called rcc, but it can only compile for Unix.[74] SCO Canada continued to sell HCR's Cfront-based C++ product, which by 1991 had an estimated 450 licensed sites using it.[75] The Toronto site also took on some porting and integration work.[76]

 
A thick volume: Guide to Software, Hardware, and Services for the SCO System V Environment, 1990

SCO had a large technical publications operation at this time, with substantial staffing in each of the Santa Cruz, Toronto, and Watford offices, who as a group published on the order of 30,000 pages of documentation on a 18-month release cycle.[77] One of the tech writers at Watford from 1991 to 1995 was science-fiction author Charles Stross,[77] and his experiences in that office would provide some of the setting for his 2000s work The Atrocity Archives.[78]

Collectively, Xenix and SCO UNIX became the most installed flavor of Unix due to the popularity of the x86 architecture. Hardware manufacturers that manufactured Intel-based systems and that resold a SCO operating system on it included not just Compaq but also DEC, Tandy Computers, Siemens Nixdorf, Olivetti, Unisys, and Hewlett-Packard.[6] Especially significant were those systems with multiprocessor capability, such as the Compaq SystemPro,[6] for which the SCO MPX multiprocessor extension to SCO UNIX had been delivered in 1990 based on development work that SCO did in conjunction with the firm Corollary, Inc.[79] This effort produced the first version of Unix to support the symmetric multiprocessing capability of Compaq's.[3]

The primary market segment for SCO Unix was small businesses, such as real estate offices or florists to take two examples, where specialized dealers who were familiar with a particular application domain built or assembled customized software for that domain and then sold that as a turnkey solution to the business.[60] SCO Unix was also used by chains such as Radio Shack and Taco Bell.[60]

SCO capitalized on the increasingly prevalent "open systems" movement of the time, which held that a combination of interoperability, portability, and open software standards should result in computer users should not being locked into any one computer company's product.[6][4][80] Moreover, Doug Michels became an effective and convincing advocate for the open systems idea.[6] The premise in SCO's case was that an industry standard operating system for industry standard hardware – capable of handling the kind of multi-tasking, multi-user workload that MS-DOS could not – would give customers a compelling offering that previously was thought only possible with considerably more expensive minicomputers.[6][4] By early 1991, The New York Times was publishing a profile of SCO based around the notion that it might become "the next Microsoft".[6]

Applications and SCO Office Portfolio edit

While SCO operating systems were often the basis of vertical market software offerings by others,[81] SCO had long desired to create additional horizontal market software applications for its operating system product as part of further popularizing it.[60] Thus SCO had provided some basic applications with Xenix, including database, graphics, a word processor, and a spreadsheet.[15]

In 1988, these applications were bundled together as part of an offering known as SCO Office Portfolio, which serves as an integrated environment for office automation on Xenix, SCO Unix, and SCO Open Desktop.[81][82] The portfolio primarily comprises SCO Lyrix, a word processor; SCO Professional, a spreadsheet; and SCO Integra, an SQL-based relational database.[83] The first two were developed by SCO,[84] while SCO Integra is based on an SQL engine from Coromandel Industries[85] augmented by a 4GL called Accell from Unify Corporation.[86]

Linking them together was the SCO Manager, which has a character-based but multi-windowed interface.[87] It provides desktop tools such as mail, calendaring, and chat; an expandable menu system; and a clipboard mechanism for transmitting information between applications.[83][84] The system administration interface for SCO Unix itself also adopted the Portfolio Manager interface.[88]

Early 1990 also saw the release of Microsoft Word version 5.0 for Xenix and SCO Unix, which was also available as part of SCO Office Portfolio.[89] It has functionality equivalent to Word for DOS,[89] and was marketed to government agencies and other organizations running multiuser office systems.[90] This was followed in early 1991 by Word 5.1 for SCO Unix, which has graphical user interface support.[91] As part of adapting Word to Unix, SCO made various enhancements for multiuser support and workgroup-related features.[91]

SCO had visions of selling its applications on platforms other than its own. In late 1988, SCO and Sun Microsystems announced that SCO Office Portfolio would be ported to Sun-3 workstations running SunOS.[92] And in mid-1990, SCO made its Word for Unix available for AT&T 3B2 and AT&T 6386 systems.[90][91]

One of the offerings in the SCO Office Portfolio was SCO FoxBase+, a version of FoxBase that is explicitly purposed as a look-alike to the popular dBase III database software for MS-DOS.[87][89] And even SCO's advertisements had called SCO Professional a "workalike" of the popular Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet.[84] This resulted in problems when, in July 1990, Lotus Development Corporation sued SCO for copyright infringement, as one of several such actions that Lotus took against its imitators and competitors.[93] The suit was settled out of court a year later; in a victory for Lotus, SCO agreed to stop all sales and licensing of SCO Professional and instead recommend that customers use 1-2-3.[94][95]

In the end, SCO had neither the market share nor the sales ability to compete on applications with the major players in that area such as Microsoft and Lotus.[54] Accordingly, staffing level and expenses for application work were sharply reduced in 1991,[60] and again in 1993–94.[54] The final version of Microsoft Word for SCO Unix, for instance, was 5.1.1; it was eventually withdrawn as a product by SCO in 1996.[96]

ACE and near insolvency edit

Besides Microsoft, venture capitalists owned about 20 percent of SCO by 1991, meaning that the Michelses owned a majority of the company,[6][4] although by 1993 the Michelses' share was stated as being about one-third.[37] These venture capital firms included Morgan Stanley, Accel Partners, Chancellor Capital, and Wolfensohn & Company.[37]

 
SCO's Toronto development office was housed in this building (here seen several years after the site was shut down).

During the late 1980s and early 1990s, analysts said that, given its revenue SCO should be more profitable than it was.[49] Indeed, SCO had never been able to show profits on a consistent basis;[60] through the end of fiscal 1991 SCO had accumulated a total loss of $31 million over its entire existence.[37] SCO had high staffing levels, with for instance the $106 million revenue for 1990 going along with 1,300 employees, which was twice the level a typical software company of its era would have had.[6] One analyst said that SCO "is run like a university, a family-run university, not a company."[6] Commenting on the company's efforts to write applications for Unix themselves, another analyst said "It's a company that attacks in all directions."[60] In part due to this kind of criticism, the Michelses said in late 1990 that they saw significant downsides to going public and preferred to remain private.[6][4] One former employee recalled that Larry Michels "ran SCO like it was a downhill skier racing out of control. He liked to think the company was literally like that – the fastest guy was always a little bit out of control. SCO was always a little out of control."[5]

The late 1980s saw considerable interest in RISC-based processor architectures in comparison to Intel's existing CISC-based approach, and there was particular interest in the R3000 and R4000 processors from MIPS Computer Systems.[97] Major hardware vendors such as Digital Equipment Corporation were switching over to RISC-based systems.

In April 1991, the Advanced Computing Environment initiative was announced.[97] There were a number of companies involved, but in term of the major players, it consisted of Compaq, Microsoft, MIPS Computer Systems, DEC and the Santa Cruz Operation.[98] It had the goal of building the next generation commodity computing platform around the MIPS processor.[97] Microsoft's role was to supply a version of OS/2 for the processor[97] (this OS/2 version would become the basis of Windows NT).[98] SCO's job was to supply the Unix operating system for the processor.[97] The work consisted of taking DEC's OSF/1 variant of Unix as one starting point, SCO's Open Desktop as another, and adding in elements of DEC's previous Ultrix flavor, to produce a Unix for the ACE platform.[99] SCO created a top-level business unit within the company to focus on the ACE work and the expected market resulting from it.[100]

But almost from the beginning, the ACE consortium was challenged by the difficulty of large, powerful companies with disparate interests working together; one German executive from a non-member company called ACE an "eier-legende Wollmilchsau" (egg-laying woolen milk pig).[101] By November 1991, SCO's work was reported as six months behind schedule.[102] At the same time, indications were reported in trade media, the business press, and the general press that the ACE project as a whole was in trouble.[102][60][103] In April 1992, a year after the start, the project fell apart; SCO publicly acknowledged that it had abandoned work on the Unix for MIPS and had withdrawn from the consortium, no longer confident that the project would succeed or was even necessary given improvements in CISC processor speed from Intel.[104][80] Compaq withdrew as well, and MIPS Computer Systems was in the middle of being bought out.[104] Only some of the heavy engineering expenditures that SCO had spent on ACE were recoverable; Larry Michels said, "We learned a lot out of ACE. We learned the hard way."[80]

"We knew how to code, we knew how to market and sell, and we knew how to party. We were growing like crazy and didn't know quite when to stop."

—Doug Michels in 2012, reflecting upon SCO's history.[105]

As a whole during this period, SCO's expenses were too high and the company was undercapitalized.[4] And by several accounts, during 1991 the company came close to becoming bankrupt.[4][54] The year saw a large-scale reduction in staffing levels from that peak of 1,300 – with around 12 percent of the workforce being let go across two rounds of layoffs – together with a company-wide reorganization that involved new managers being brought in from other technology companies.[60][80][37] Especially targeted for elimination were the projects to build applications for Unix.[60]

Following these changes, SCO showed a profit during its fiscal 1992 and the first half of its fiscal 1993.[37] In 1992, Software Magazine wrote that SCO had long been "the only major player in this market," but noted that Univel and SunSoft were both introducing Unix-on-Intel products.[106] Both of these were from better-financed companies.[60] But the sales of UnixWare 1.0 turned out to be modest,[107] and SCO's share of the Unix-on-Intel market was around 65 percent in mid-1993.[37] For 1993 overall, SCO sold around 185,000 copies of its Unix product, while Novell (which acquired Univel) sold around 35,000 of UnixWare and Sun's sales of Solaris-on-Intel were insignificant.[108] PC Magazine, in a lengthy review the following year of different operating system choices for the Intel architecture, wrote that SCO had a dominant position in the Unix-on-Intel market.[22] The magazine added that with its "Tyrannosaurus Rex"-like presence and more than 3,000 applications available, independent software vendors interested in Unix on PCs invariably made products that were SCO Unix-conformant.[22]

Going public edit

By the summer of 1992, it was clear that SCO was intending to go public in the near future, and a number of investment bankers, brokers, and analysts attended that year's SCO Forum conference with that possibility in mind.[80] Larry Michels now viewed becoming a public company as crucial, as it would give SCO greater access to investment capital and because it would make SCO a more credible vendor to large corporations.[80] There was also a desire to let employees benefit from the stock options they held.[37] At the same time, Michels had become prominent in the local business scene in Santa Cruz County,[109] arguing that the area had to be more aggressive about fostering economic development.[80][110] At one point he asked SCO employees to attend a public hearing in support of a controversial plan for an outlet mall in which he was an investor.[80][110] He was also a sponsor of several charitable events and philanthropies in the Santa Cruz area.[109]

On December 5, 1992, the San Jose Mercury News broke the story that three former executive secretaries at SCO had filed a lawsuit two days earlier against Larry Michels and SCO for sexual harassment.[111][112] The suit, which named the women involved and was filed in Santa Cruz County Superior Court, stated that Michels had, on repeated occasions, propositioned or groped the women and had forced them into kissing him at work.[111] In charging a sexually-hostile work environment,[113] the women characterized Michels' behavior as "oppressive, demeaning, sexually belittling, intimidating, exploitive and abusive."[114] When one of the women had complained about Michels to the human resources department, she said she was told "that's just Larry, being Larry," and that the onus was on her to come up with a proposal on how she should be treated and present it to Michels.[110] One of the women had been fired, another had quit her job, and the third had been transferred to another position after filing a complaint with the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing.[114]

When asked for his reaction by a reporter, Michels denied the allegations in the suit and said, "Did it say I raped anybody? Did it say I pinned anybody down?"[114] In response to the accusations hugging and kissing the women against their will at work, Michels said, "How serious a crime is that?"[114] And asked if he regretted any of his actions, he said "I certainly regret that I hired those three girls."[110] On December 15, a fourth-named former executive secretary joined the lawsuit, saying among other allegations that Michels had taken her to a remote wooded property he owned and tried to force himself on her and that she ran away for fear of being raped.[112] Public attention to sexual harassment had increased following the previous year's Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill hearings,[109] and complaints had been filed with the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing against other high-level male executives at SCO as well.[115] On December 16 the board of directors of SCO announced that it had appointment one of its members, Jim Harris, to investigate the situation at SCO and that the board was "extremely distressed by the recent allegations made against the company and its president."[115]

On December 21, 1992, less than three weeks after initial lawsuit was filed, Larry Michels resigned as chief executive of SCO.[116] Harris became interim president of the company.[117] The rapid sequence of events triggered what the Santa Cruz Sentinel termed a period of "internal turmoil and depression" within the organization.[117]

A month later, Lars Turndal took over as president and chief executive officer of SCO.[117] Turndal, originally from Sweden, had overseen the large growth in SCO's European operation over the preceding six years.[54] Harris became chairman of the board, while Doug Michels remained executive vice president and also became chief technical officer.[117] Programs begun by Harris, and continued by Turndal, sought to introduce to the company externally-provided classes in cultural sensitivity and to establish an internal diversity council.[117]

In early April 1993, the sexual harassment suit was settled out of court,[118] with the four women being awarded a total of $1.25 million.[113] At the same time, SCO filed the necessary papers with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission to go public.[50] Prosecutors in Santa Cruz County considered whether criminal charges should be filed against Larry Michels but after a two-month investigation decided not to.[119] Michels received a $354,000 "golden handshake" from SCO, which brought some criticism from employment rights' advocates.[120] (Michels never returned to the company, although he kept in touch with what was going on via his son, and died of a stroke in 1999.[5])

The initial public offering for The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. took place on May 27, 1993.[121] The stock traded on NASDAQ under the symbol SCOC.[122] The stock's offering price was 1212 and it closed at 1238, meaning that it did not have the first-day jump that "hot" IPOs are expected to show.[121]

The firm's initial stretch as a public company was difficult.[50][54] Two important board members, Harris and Microsoft's Gaudette, died during 1993,[50][54] with Turndal succeeding Harris as chairman.[123] By year's end the stock price was around 618, or half what it had started at.[50]

The transitions of this period marked the change in SCO from being an entrepreneur-driven company to one driven by the need to behave in a more business-like manner and show steady profits.[117][54][123] Turndal further jettisoned unprofitable applications and focused on SCO's core Unix business as well as middleware additions to strengthen the platform.[54] In December 1994, Turndal was made chair of the board as well as CEO, while Alok Mohan was elevated to president and chief operating officer.[124]

With its first release in mid-1993, Microsoft's server operating system Windows NT became a looming threat to the Unix-on-Intel market.[37][121] SCO had even more commercial competitors in the Unix-on-Intel space, including NCR, IBM, Sequent, SunSoft's Solaris, and Novell's UnixWare, and each of these is based on SVR4.[21] SCO was the only Unix-on-Intel vendor basing their product on SVR3.2.[21] But there were many applications available for OpenServer,[21] in part the result of SCO having forged many partnerships with other computer companies.[44] Over half of all SCO sales were through VARs, who typically used SCO as the basis for an end-user application and then bundled the hardware, operating system, and application as a turnkey solution.[107]

By the mid-1990s, SCO Unix in all its product releases had an installed base of a million systems sold.[44] SCO OpenServer had a foothold in the corporate world as well; the 1997 edition of the book UNIX Unleashed wrote that "It is very popular among corporate internets/intranets and has been for many years."[21] The book added that "Its technical support cannot be matched, which is why many corporations choose this commercial OS as their server OS of choice."[21]

PizzaNet, SCO Global Access, first Internet concert edit

SCO also recognized the importance of the Internet. In August 1994, SCO and Pizza Hut announced PizzaNet, a pilot program in the Santa Cruz area that allowed consumers to use their own computer to order pizza delivery from a local Pizza Hut restaurant, with connection being made over the Internet to a central Pizza Hut server in Wichita, Kansas.[125][126] The PizzaNet application software was developed by SCO's Professional Services group.[127]

PizzaNet was based on the first commercially licensed and bundled Internet operating system, SCO Global Access.[127] SCO was the first commercial Unix system supplier to license the powerful NCSA Mosaic hypertext browser and NCSA HTTPd, and the first to ship these technologies from the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign bundled with an operating system for commercial use.[128]

On August 23, 1994, SCO broadcast a live music concert from the UC Santa Cruz's Cowell Courtyard. This event, part of SCO Forum 1994, is said to be the first time a scheduled live music concert was broadcast over the Internet; it was sent over both the Mbone and the emerging World Wide Web.[129][130][131][132] The band was Deth Specula, a group composed of SCO employees.[133] Their first song parodied Grand Funk Railroad's "We're an American Band". Deth Specula sang "We Are an Internet Band" with lyrics like:

We're comin' to your town
To bring your network down
We are an Internet band.

"Everest" edit

 
Interior of an office in the main buildings on Encinal Street in Santa Cruz, with the hills of the Pogonip area outside the window

The next big product release from the company was code-named "Everest".[3] It resulted from three years of labor at SCO's Santa Cruz, Watford, and Toronto development sites,[3] an effort that amounted to $50 million in research and development costs.[134] The general thrust of the work was towards supporting the requirements of business-critical servers.[135] It included adding support for memory-mapped files, the journaling HTFS filesystem with mirroring and striping support, disk compression, RAID levels 0, 1, and 5, POSIX.1b real-time scheduling and semaphores, the Advanced Power Management interface, and SVID 3-level conformance.[3][136][137][135] Everest expanded MP support from 8 to 32 processors.[107] Everest has hardware support for 900 different physical machines, of which 60 were SMP systems, and for some 2,000 peripheral devices.[3]

Another major new feature of Everest is the SCOadmin system administration tool, with both graphical and command-line interfaces,[136] and software upgrades that can be run either locally or remotely.[137] The existence of an administration framework and GUI was considered by InfoWorld writer Jason Pontin to be important in competing with the user-friendly qualities of Windows NT.[137]

Everest was released as SCO OpenServer Release 5.[3] The release was celebrated with a corporate event at the Hudson Theatre in New York City on May 9, 1995.[134] The location was chosen in part to give the product an East Coast corporate veneer rather than a West Coast laid-back one.[135] As part of the release publicity, SCO emphasized they had settled on competing in the server market and had halted any attempt to compete with Windows in the desktop client market.[135]

Industry analysts were generally impressed with OpenServer.[135] Testers of beta releases of the product, including Taco Bell which was deploying OpenServer to each of its 4,000 stores, were impressed by its reliability.[138]

 
Distributors, resellers and the like: 'The channel' was vital to SCO's success.

Although parts of the Unix kernel were rewritten during the Everest project,[3] it is still fundamentally the nearly ten-year-old System V Release 3.2 kernel and as such has some limitations, such as not being multithreaded.[139] This lack of native threads support would prove a challenge in years to come when certain kinds of modern system software needed to run on the platform.[140] OpenServer 5 was compatible with around 8,000 business applications,[134] and it was partly a desire to maintain compatibility with existing applications that prevented SCO from making more drastic changes to the operating system.[139] Overall on a technical evaluation, PC Magazine found OpenServer 5 to be good but not quite as good as Novell's UnixWare 2 product.[136] One Unix OEM told PC Week that OpenServer 5 was "a good product, but it's not a revolutionary product; it's an evolutionary product. It doesn't quite do the enterprise stuff people are looking for."[139]

One project which sought to improve OpenServer's technology base was code-named "MK2".[141] Its origins date to 1992 with an agreement between SCO and the French company Chorus Systèmes SA for cooperative work on the Chorus microkernel technology in the context of combining OpenServer with a microkernel for use in real-time processing environments in telecommunications and other areas.[142] The first result of this, a dual-functionality product called Chorus/Fusion for SCO Open Systems Software, was released in 1994.[143] By 1995, SCO had set up a business unit for the MK2 venture and was spending considerable amounts of engineering resources on what was now a reimplementation of OpenServer to run on top of the Chorus microkernel, in what was going to be called the SCO Telecommunications OS Platform.[144][145] A primary customer for this work was the Private Communications Systems unit within Siemens AG.[141][146] Later in 1995 the MK2 project had to adjust for SCO's acquisition of UnixWare technology from Novell,[146] and the goal became to run merged OpenServer/UnixWare code on top of Chorus.[147] However, by early 1997, relations had broken down between SCO, Chorus, and the customer, and the MK2 project was scrapped without having achieved fruition.[148][149]

Through several changes of corporate ownership, SCO OpenServer 5 would remain a supported product into the 2020s.[150]

On July 1, 1995, Lars Turndal retired and Alok Mohan became the company's CEO.[151] Mohan's background was in corporate finance and strategic planning with AT&T Global Information Solutions.[151] The equities market immediately reflected changes in SCO financial statements: When customers spent more time evaluating OpenServer 5 rather than buying it during the first quarter it was available, SCO missed its forecasted earnings and SCO stock lost a quarter of its value.[152]

Client Integration Division edit

In February 1993, SCO acquired IXI Limited, a software company in Cambridge, UK, best known for its X.desktop product, which formed the graphical basis of Open Desktop.[153] In December 1994, SCO bought Visionware, of Leeds, UK, developers of XVision.[154] The roles of the two companies were different but complementary, as one former SCO UK employee has succinctly summarised: "IXI specialised in software that ran on Unix and made Unix easier to use. ... Visionware specialised in software that ran on Windows that made Unix easier to use."[155]

In 1995, SCO combined the two development teams to form the IXI Visionware, Ltd. subsidiary.[156] Later in 1995, the merged business unit was subsumed more fully into its parent and became the Client Integration Division of SCO.[155]

 
Main floor of the SCO Leeds office, 1997

These acquisitions were part of SCO acknowledging that it did not want to compete with Microsoft on the desktop, but rather wanted to put forward a Windows-friendly product strategy.[50][54] It also fit SCO's idea of the client–server model of computing, where SCO would offer connectivity and middleware components to support Windows clients talking to SCO servers.[157]

In May 1997, the Client Integration Division released the Vision97 family of products: XVision Eclipse (a PC X server), VisionFS (an SMB server for UNIX), TermVision (a terminal emulator for Microsoft Windows), SuperVision (centralised management of users from Windows), and SQL-Retriever (ODBC- and JDBC-compliant database connectivity software).[158] The VisionFS product was developed from scratch by the Cambridge development team; the other products were developed by the Leeds development team and were mostly new versions of the existing Visionware products.[155] A later release of the suite is branded as Vision2K.[159]

The Client Integration Division was relatively independent of the rest of SCO, for reasons both technical and organizational. It ported its code to all major Unix platforms, including those of SCO's competitors.[159][155] It operated its own web site for some time.[42] The SCO Unix channel-based sales model did not work well for the Vision products,[160] and the client division had its own sales force.[155] This was illustrated by SCO having two different subsidiaries in Japan: Nihon SCO, which dealt with the operating system products and services, and SCO K.K., a joint venture which handled the Vision product line.[161]

Later history edit

The Novell–SCO–HP deal of 1995 edit

 
Corporate history in a joke: Bjarne Stroustrup, the creator of C++, worked for AT&T and then USL, who made a promotional cardboard cutout figure of himself. Novell and then SCO inherited the cutout. For some time after the Novell–SCO–HP deal closed, all three companies were sharing the same office space in Florham Park, New Jersey. In order to demark which corridors were SCO's, the Stroustrup cutout was put up with a hat, a bolo tie-with-badge, and a SCO business card saying "SCOland Sheriff".

Novell's 1993 acquisition of Unix System Laboratories had never really worked out,[162] and by late summer 1995 Novell was looking for a way out of the Unix business.[163] On September 20, 1995, Novell announced the sale of that business to SCO, coincident with a licensing arrangement with Hewlett-Packard.[164] As part of the deal, SCO said that it would merge the SVR4.2-based UnixWare with the SVR3.2-based OpenServer, creating a new merged product code-named "Gemini".[164][165] Gemini would then be sold through SCO's channel and reseller operation.[164] SCO and HP also said that they would co-develop a next-generation, 64-bit version of Unix for use with "Merced", the code name for HP and Intel's upcoming 64-bit architecture.[166] Some 400 Novell software engineers had been working on UnixWare, mostly in an office in Florham Park, New Jersey; almost all of these engineers joined either SCO or HP[164][166] (about a year later, the SCO part relocated to offices in Murray Hill, New Jersey). The part of the deal between Novell and SCO closed on December 6, 1995.[1]

As Doug Michels later reflected in 2006, SCO seized on the idea of buying the Unix business from Novell for three reasons: "for one, we got all the talent from Bell Labs that had created Unix; two, we got the moral authority around Unix; and three, we got rid of all the crazy historical licensing problems" dating from Unix's origins within AT&T.[19] In order to reduce the price to SCO, part of the deal was that SCO agreed to pay a royalty stream back to Novell of UnixWare sales.[19]

By December 1995, there were already some indications that the three-way arrangement was not working out as had been initially advertised.[165] The computer industry was not sure that SCO could handle being the primary Unix shepherd.[163] The HP project, code-named "White Box", focused on making a hybrid environment out of the SRV4.2-based Gemini and the SVR3.2-based HP-UX, but that effort faced major technical hurdles.[165]

"White Box" became the 3DA effort, the purpose of which was to unify OpenServer, UnixWare, and HP-UX in some way to produce a resulting product would then become the de facto Unix standard for both existing IA-32 systems and the upcoming IA-64.[167] The effort was motivated in part by threat of Windows NT threat taking advantage of splits among Unix providers when 64-bit systems arrived in common use.[168] By August 1996, HP and SCO were delivering application programming interface (API) specifications to various OEMs and ISVs, as well as doing a best-of-breed technology analysis to determine whether Gemini or HP-UX would be the going-forward source base for a given component.[169] Both companies were also doing porting work to Merced using the early-version compilers available.[169]

The effort was still in theory going in early 1997, when HP and SCO were to publish the "Lodi" set of common programming interfaces for a 64-bit Unix incorporating elements of OpenServer, UnixWare, and HP-UX.[168] But little progress had been made on actual implementation, with sources for only a few components having been exchanged by the two companies.[170] The collaboration failed for both business reasons – HP and SCO had differing perceptions of the marketplace – and technical ones – an inability to produce a common binary Unix-for-Intel product that could run existing applications from both companies' user bases.[170] Primary among the technical obstacles were endianness considerations.[171]

As an InformationWeek story later wrote, the three-way deal had been a "complicated plan" that was "confusing from the start".[163] The terms of the deal between Novell and SCO were uncertain enough that an amendment to the agreement had to be signed in October 1996.[163] (Even that was not clear enough to preclude an extended legal battle between Novell and The SCO Group during SCO-Linux disputes of the 2000s,[163] a battle that The SCO Group eventually lost.[172])

"Gemini" and the UDK edit

Meanwhile, SCO focused on "Gemini", the task of combining the OpenServer and UnixWare product lines on 32-bit systems. The fundamental idea behind the Gemini was that SCO could merge OpenServer 5 and UnixWare 2 in a way that would satisfy the requirements of both small businesses and large enterprises and thus keep the existing customer base that SCO had with OpenServer while entering the enterprise space with UnixWare.[173]

One consequence of the UnixWare acquisition was that the New Jersey office of Novell had a languages and development tools group with more advanced technology than what SCO Canada had been working with, including a C++ compiler based upon the Edison Design Group front-end,[174][175] and that made the SCO Canada engineering staff largely redundant once the Novell deal was closed. As a result, the Toronto office was shut down in early 1996.[176]

 
A meeting room in the SCO's Watford, England, office in 1997, where a UDK-related training session for support and escalation staff was being given by New Jersey-based staff; portions of a UnixWare desktop are being projected.

What the New Jersey group produced was the Universal Development Kit (UDK),[174] which was a key element in the question of how to help OpenServer users to make the move to Gemini.[177] With the UDK, a single build of a single version of an application's source code could produce binaries that would run unaltered on all three of SCO's platforms: UnixWare 2, OpenServer 5, and the upcoming Gemini.[178][175] The UDK featured more modern C and C++ compilers and other tools compared to what OpenServer had, and included platform-specific optimizations for things such as C++ exception handling.[174] The hope was that existing OpenServer developers would switch to using the UDK and thereby get an easy path towards migrating to Gemini.[177]

Support for the new Java programming language and related Java technologies was also emphasized as a key part of the UDK and the operating system products themselves.[179] Over the next several years, SCO would add engineering efforts towards making Java an effective vehicle for customers to use on SCO platforms, including a mapping of Java threads onto UnixWare light-weight processes, recognition of Java class files as first-class Unix executables, as well as adapting a just-in-time compiler to the original Sun Java virtual machine.[179][140] Another announced SCO effort related to Java was PerkUp, an infrastructure built on the Java classloader facility that was billed as an additional service for UnixWare 7 that would reduce the total memory and throughput needs when multiple Java server applications were running on a system[180] (however, PerkUp never emerged as a product, and the patent for it ended up with Apple, Inc. before expiring).[181]

Initially, SCO had made a strong push for Gemini among the SCO user base; the August 1996 instance of the annual SCO Forum conference dedicated an extra two days to a series of "Gemini Fast-Track" sessions.[182] But by a year later, SCO had decided it would not push the migration that quickly, although it still expected that within two or three years all users would migrate.[177] One SCO executive said, "We mustn't disenfranchise the OpenServer path ... those guys [SCO resellers] are our lifeblood" and recalled that a few years earlier, SCO resellers had continued to sell Xenix-based systems even after SCO had stopped development work on Xenix.[177]

When released as a product, Gemini was called UnixWare 7;[173] the "7" was picked to reflect the summed merge of OpenServer 5 and UnixWare 2.[183] SCO referred to UnixWare 7 as being based on an SVR5 kernel,[184] indicating a significant jump over the existing SVR4.2, although the SVR5 designation was not picked up by the Unix world at large.[44] UnixWare 7 was announced in March 1998 at an event in New York.[185]

SCO committed itself to still maintaining and improving the OpenServer product for a couple of years, but made clear that it would never be expanded to 64-bit architectures.[173] Thus at that point, OpenServer users would have to migrate.[186]

"Big E" and DCAP edit

 
Much of the DCAP work was done here in 1998 at the SCO offices in Murray Hill, New Jersey.

SCO management was intent on selling UnixWare through OEM deals with hardware manufacturers aiming at the enterprise market, and towards this end in 1996 they announced the "Big E" initiative that would standardize UnixWare as the operating system on these systems and that would attract independent software vendors to make their products available on such systems.[160] Hardware vendors already supporting UnixWare 7 included IBM, HP, Compaq, and Tandem, despite some of them offering their own Unix flavors on their high-end RISC systems.[186] In particular, SCO had deals with IBM to sell UnixWare on the IBM Netfinity system.[187]

In February 1998, SCO announced the creation of the Data Center Acceleration Program (DCAP), which sought to add features related to reliability, availability, and scalability to UnixWare 7 in order to make it fully suitable for high-end, Intel-based systems deployed in data centers.[188] The funding for DCAP came from Intel and from four hardware OEM providers of Intel-based servers: Compaq, Data General, ICL, and Unisys.[189] The features to be added to UnixWare 7 included six-way clustering and support for 16-way ccNUMA servers.[189] As one analyst for International Data Group said, "UnixWare is moving upmarket."[190] The program was also intended to help SCO fund development of UnixWare for the Merced architecture and give the four hardware vendors access to the resulting 64-bit OEM UnixWare without requiring further porting to each vendor's specific hardware.[191]

A year later, at the CeBIT show in March 1999, SCO announced the release of UnixWare 7, Data Center Edition, as the product of the DCAP effort.[190] In addition to the sponsoring companies, IBM and Sequent both said they would offer the data center edition on their servers.[190] In terms of high availability figures, the data center edition promised 99.99% availability ("four nines") at the time of release, with 99.995% ("four and a half nines") to arrive by 2000.[192] Another avenue towards capturing space in the enterprise was work that SCO did in conjunction with Compaq and Tandem towards the 1998 release of UnixWare NonStop Clusters.[193]

The data center release came out at the same time as UnixWare 7.1 release, which offers six different edition bundles in all.[184] A review in InfoWorld said that "UnixWare 7 is the sturdiest and most feature-rich Unix ever ported to Intel processors" and added that, especially with the addition of the webtop interface, the 7.1 release was equal in polish to Windows NT.[184] UnixWare 7.1 started seeing some strong sales.[187]

Through several changes of corporate ownership, UnixWare 7 would remain a supported product into the 2020s.[194]

Another multi-company initiative that SCO led was the Uniform Driver Interface project (UDI), which sought to establish an OS-neutral and platform-neutral portable interface for writing device drivers.[195] The UDI project had the backing of Intel, HP, IBM, Compaq, Sun, and others, as well as the involvement of independent hardware vendors such as Adaptec.[196] UDI details were heavily discussed at the 1999 edition of SCO Forum;[197] and UDI materialized in SCO operating systems with later UnixWare 7 and OpenServer 5 releases.[198]

Tarantella product edit

October 1997 saw the first release of a new product from the Client Integration Division.[199]Tarantella is an application brokering platform that sits between back-end applications running on various platforms and Java-enabled web browser clients.[200] An initial limitation was that it supported applications running on Unix but needed third-party software in order to handle mainframe or Windows applications.[200] One selling point of Tarantella is that users could begin working on an application on one client, have to stop working for whatever reason, and then resume working from that point on from another client.[200] A review in InfoWorld viewed Tarantella was promising but needing more work.[200]

 
View out of the SCO Cambridge office, 1999

Later version 1.x releases support more application types, such as AS/400 and IBM mainframe applications.[199] More client types were added as well, including native clients to remove the dependency on Java support. The product also added scalability and security features to better support larger enterprises and secure application access over the Internet.

A rebranding to Tarantella Enterprise II took place in late 1999.[201] This release added support for Windows applications via native support for Microsoft's Remote Desktop Protocol.[199] At that point, the primary competitor to Tarantella became the MetaFrame product from Citrix Systems.[202] While Citrix was the dominant player in this space, it did not yet support Unix applications, whereas Tarantella does.[203][199]

Significant revenue from Tarantella did not happen during the 1990s, as it had a long sales cycle due to lengthy customer evaluations.[187] SCO then sought to market Tarantella as a platform for application service providers to use[202] and as a way that companies could host and outsource applications.[203] As part of this, SCO sought to use Tarantella as a way of promoting itself as a new dot com company as opposed to its twenty-year history as an operating system provider.[203]

SCO were pioneers in the notion of a web desktop, or webtop. This was also central to the idea of how Tarantella presents applications to a user. This was integrated with Tarantella to provide a UnixWare 7 webtop in 1999 which organizes access to UnixWare and its applications via any Java-enabled web browser.[204] To some industry reviewers, the OS webtop was a compelling feature.[184]

Customers and financial state edit

Between 1996 and 1997, SCO's share of the Unix systems sold rose from 36 percent to 40 percent.[185] By 1998, the figure was over 40 percent.[205] And in 1998, shipments of SCO Unix systems grew by 58 percent over 1997, a greater increase than for any other server-oriented flavor of Unix.[190] The Unix market as a whole was considered strong, despite fears of the increasing power of Windows NT.[185] And by 1998, SCO had 85 percent of the Unix-on-Intel market.[191] At the end of the 1990s, SCO Unix systems had around 15,000 value-added resellers (VARs) and an infrastructure presence of some kind in 80 countries around the world.[206] SCO also had a strong business in replicated sites, meaning retail companies where there was a SCO system in each store of a chain; such customers included fast food outlets such as McDonald's, Pizza Hut, and Taco Bell;[207][127][186] pharmacy chains such as CVS Pharmacy and Walgreens;[186] and other chains such as Kmart and Radio Shack.[60] Other well-known companies who were SCO customers included Northwest Airlines,[60] as well as Goodyear Tire & Rubber, Nasdaq, Inc., and Lucent Technologies.[207] SCO was named to PC Magazine's "100 Most Influential Companies" list in both 1997[208] and 1998.[209]

SCO profit/loss by year (as a public company, in millions of dollars)[43][61]

The company did not have good financial results during this time.[210] By 1997, there were few independent operating system vendors left in the industry other than SCO.[55] Being a software-only company whose revenue was only around the $200 million mark left SCO with marginal resources to compete with Unixes from the big RISC vendors like Digital, HP, and Sun.[191] Engineering costs were high,[160] as UnixWare 7 and Tarantella each resulted from two years of research and development activity.[210] During 1997 there were some reductions in staff and closing of regional offices.[210]

In April 1998, Doug Michels was named as president and CEO of the company, with Alok Mohan becoming chairman of the board.[211] Michels said that he never aimed to become CEO, preferring to remain more technology-focused, but that he had always had a lot of visibility into the CEO role and was "obviously very emotionally and intellectually attached to the company" and its stakeholders.[211]

One of Michels' first actions was to oversee a switch to electronic software licensing for SCO's products.[212] The third quarter of fiscal 1997 had included a $23 million charge for reduction in channel inventory,[210] and Michels said he was determined to eliminate issues related to the size of physical inventory.[212] He stated that, "SCO believes electronic licensing and distribution of products will be a standard for the industry."[212] The channel inventory was emptied by July 1998 and the new electronic licensing was in effect the following month for a new point release of OpenServer 5, the product that was still accounting for some 80 percent of SCO's Unix revenues.[213]

"Monterey" edit

 
Project Monterey T-shirt given to employees of the companies involved

During the mid- to late 1990s, many in the computer industry believed that Intel's under-development 64-bit architecture, known as IA-64 and code-named "Merced", would dominate the marketplace once released.[214] But the architecture was very different from IA-32 and migrating operating systems and tools to it was very expensive.[215] SCO needed a well-funded hardware company to ally with; the earlier 3DA initiative with HP had failed,[214] and discussions about SCO being compatible with the "Bravo Unix" from Compaq and its Digital Unix had not gotten far.[216] When IBM proposed an alliance, SCO jumped at the chance to further bolster its entry into the enterprise space.[214]

The core idea of Project Monterey was to take elements from IBM's AIX, Sequent's DYNIX/ptx, and SCO's UnixWare, to form a merged 64-bit Unix for Intel's Merced architecture.[205][217] This merged OS was supposed to become available at the same time as Merced, in mid-2000.[218]

Along the way, there would be stages of earlier deliverables.[218] IBM pledged as part of the deal to make UnixWare 7 its Unix of choice for high volume IA-32 systems and to devote considerable efforts towards selling UnixWare 7 through its sales and marketing mechanisms.[217] This would be aided by IBM including its middleware and some AIX technology into 32-bit UnixWare, and conversely some UnixWare technology would be incorporated into future versions of AIX.[219][218] IBM would gain access to SCO's experience with Unix on Intel as well as access to SCO's reseller channel.[205]

Part of the motivation for Monterey was another attempt by Unix vendors to show a clear advantage for Unix in the high-end enterprise space against Microsoft's latest NT offering, now being branded as Windows 2000 and scheduled to be available for Merced as well.[205][218] Towards that end, Intel said they would create a multi-million dollar fund for ISVs to develop for the 64-bit Monterey.[218][220]InfoWorld stated that IBM had "stunned the industry" with the move,[219] in part because IBM was playing catch-up in the Merced space.[220]

 
Several engineers from SCO's New Jersey office about to enter the IBM Toronto Lab in February 1999, in order to discuss aspects of Project Monterey

The project was announced by the involved companies on October 26, 1998, in New York.[217] An IBM executive said, "IBM is totally committed to making this effort a success."[220] One SCO executive said that Monterey was "probably the biggest deal SCO has done."[201]

But not every industry observer was enthusiastic; the story about the deal in Computer Reseller News began, "Just what the world needs: another Unix."[220] In any case, the project proceeded, with AIX becoming the dominant technology within it rather than UnixWare.[221] By October 1999, a year after the announcement, the work-in-progress Monterey was said to be up and operational on early silicon versions of Itanium, as Merced was by then officially called, and able to run both 32-bit UnixWare binaries and 64-bit natively built binaries on it.[187]

However, as 2000 began, things were changing at IBM, as there was a corporate-wide strategic initiative to get behind the open-source Linux operating system.[214] A few months later IBM released a major upgrade to AIX, but instead of it being associated with Monterey, it was called AIX 5L with the 'L' indicating an affinity for Linux.[214] It was clear to industry observers that IBM considered Monterey to be over with.[222] IBM's decision to shelve Monterey left the SCO product line without a 64-bit Unix solution.[207] Itanium was further delayed, and when it did come out, it failed to succeed in the marketplace; so Project Monterey was a failure from multiple perspectives.[214]

Y2K surge and recede edit

The open-source-software movement was something that SCO had to be cognizant of, and for a number of years SCO Skunkware, a frequently updated collection of open source packages built for SCO platforms, had helped bridge the gap between the traditional and open source development worlds.[223] Then in an attempt to deal with the growing popularity of Linux as a low-cost operating system, during 1999 SCO began offering consulting services for Linux.[224] SCO also engaged in partnerships with, and investments into, various Linux companies.[201] This included agreements to sell Linux distributions from Caldera Systems, SuSE, and TurboLinux,[225] as well as a partnership to provide professional services to customers of TurboLinux server farms and an investment in the LinuxMall portal site.[187] One motivation for some of these initiatives was an effort by SCO to enlarge its professional services operation, as by 1999 such activity only comprised about 5 percent of SCO's total revenues.[187] Finally, a vice president for marketing was hired who had a Linux background.[226]

 
Unix on a PC: lab racks in the Murray Hill, New Jersey, office

During 1998 and 1999, much of the computer industry, including SCO, was focused on dealing with the Y2K problem.[40] SCO saw a surge in sales as customers bought new, Y2K-compliant products and upgrades to replace the vulnerable software they were running.[105] As a consequence, the company began reporting better financial results during 1999 and its stock began a slow upward climb, starting from a prior low point of 238.[226] To meet the demand, SCO added more staff.[105]

In October 1999, the company announced record earnings for a quarter and a year and its highest yearly revenue mark at $224 million.[224] The results broke a four-year streak of SCO losing money.[187] The company also had the best cash position in its history, with some $62 million in that form or in short-term investments.[201] As a result, its stock price rose to a new high of 141516.[224] Michels expressed optimism, saying the year was "a turning point" and "the beginning of very strong ongoing business."[187]

"The growth spurt was fake, and the reality of it was we were stealing from our future. After Y2K, sales dropped like a rock. Customers were done upgrading. We had to cut staff. The stock dropped."

—Doug Michels in 2012, reflecting upon part of what led to the end for the Santa Cruz Operation.[105]

The stock's biggest surge happened in mid-December 1999, when Steve Harmon, an influential analyst covering technology companies, went on CNBC and included SCO on his list of ten stock picks for 2000.[201] The stock promptly jumped by 7 points,[201] and in late December 1999 the stock reached an all-time high of 3578.[227] SCO's value was seen in having a solid core business with earnings and revenue; in having some kind of Linux play; and in having a new-technology, Internet-capitalizing product in Tarantella.[226][201] An analyst for the GiGa Information Group agreed that SCO was a company to watch in 2000.[201]

But the Y2K-based splurge would not last.[227] In March and July 2000, SCO announced earnings shortfalls, with SCO's Unix products selling slowly once Y2K anxiety was past.[227] The increasing popularity of Linux solutions had resumed taking its toll as well.[225] By July, only seven months after its peak at over 35, the stock price had crashed to below 5.[225] The company announced it was cutting costs as a result[227] and that it had hired investment bankers Chase H&Q to explore "strategic combinations" with other companies.[225]

Fundamentally, SCO was doing battle on one hand in a commercial software world increasingly dominated by Microsoft and on the other hand in a world where open source Linux was undermining commercial software itself.[228] These two factors made constantly pleasing Wall Street investors with double-digit growth figures an imposing task.[229] In particular, Linux posed an existential threat to SCO OpenServer's low-end marketshare;[230] as one analyst said, "Linux can give you the same value proposition [as SCO] – a Unix on cheap hardware – for less money."[231] And despite all the efforts, UnixWare had not been fully successful in competing in the high-end market,[231] and now Linux was threatening UnixWare's share of that as well.[230] As a result, by mid-2000, SCO's market position, and the company itself, was rapidly collapsing.[228][232]

Final history edit

Asset sale and change of name edit

In March 2000, at the time of the first announced earnings shortfall, SCO had reorganized into three divisions: Server Software, Professional Services, and Tarantella.[231] The split was intended to highlight Tarantella as a product independent of SCO Unix,[231] and was seen by industry analysts as a prelude to some or all of the divisions being sold.[232] As one International Data Corporation analyst said, "SCO has to do something with their business model because their business is eroding."[225]

 
End of an era: Caldera Systems addresses the SCO community at Forum 2000.

On August 2, 2000, following several months of negotiations, SCO announced that it would sell its Server Software and Services Divisions, including UnixWare, to the Linux company Caldera Systems.[233][234] The deal was complex, involving cash, stock, and loans, and difficult to evaluate monetarily, but based on the price of Caldera Systems stock at the time it was worth around $110–114 million.[235][234][230]

The idea of the purchase from Caldera Systems' perspective is that it would gain access to SCO's large VAR channel; the value of such channels was well known to former Novell chief Ray Noorda, whose Canopy Group was funding Caldera Systems.[225] The announcement that SCO was selling its Unix assets to a Linux distribution company represented, in the view of Eric Raymond, the completion of the move from the commercial Unix industry to the open-source movement.[20] From Doug Michels' later perspective, the problem with Linux was not that it was open source and free itself, but rather that in August 1999, during the dot-com boom, the Linux company Red Hat had been able to get $400 million during their IPO and was not expected to make a profit anytime soon, while SCO was an established public company closely watched by the stock market that was expected to make a profit and had only around $50 million in cash.[19] By this time, the SCO stock price was down around 212.[228] Thus when the chance came to merge with Caldera Systems, which was in a generally similar position as Red Hat although with less cash, SCO took it.[19]

SCO was much the bigger company, with 900 employees at that point to Caldera Systems' 120.[235] Throughout the year there had been layoffs from SCO,[228] including the shutting down of the Watford development office.[69] In addition a number of longtime SCO employees chose to leave the company.[228] An especially large layoff took place in September 2000, soon after the Caldera Systems announcement, when 190 employees were let go, comprising 19 percent of the company's workforce.[232] This layoff included 40 employees in Santa Cruz itself.[228]

The SCO acquisition was originally scheduled to close in October 2000,[234] but got delayed due to concerns from the Securities and Exchange Commission regarding the details of the merger.[236] However, the two companies' support organizations did get combined during this time.[236] In addition, there was confusion among the SCO customer base about the fate of OpenServer.[237] So in February 2001, the deal was renegotiated to include OpenServer in what was sold to Caldera Systems, although a percentage of OpenServer revenue would still go back to SCO. The monetary terms of the deal were adjusted as well, with Caldera Systems paying SCO more cash than in the original agreement.[237]

Finally on May 7, 2001, SCO completed the sale of its Server Software and Services Divisions, as well as UnixWare and OpenServer technologies, to Caldera Systems.[206] At that time Caldera Systems changed its name to Caldera International,[238] and the remaining part of SCO, the Tarantella Division, changed its name to Tarantella, Inc.[239]

Aftermath edit

The sale of the company's Unix assets and renaming of what was left marked the end of an era for not just SCO but the town of Santa Cruz as well.[228] The staff going to Caldera moved into the 400 Encincal building while the newly named Tarantella occupied the 425 Encinal structure.[228]

There were ironies in SCO's demise being largely from the effects of Linux, since SCO had been a pioneer of the open systems movement. As one writer stated, "In some ways, SCO was Linux before Linux, popularizing Unix on low-cost Intel machines."[51]

In August 2002, Caldera International renamed itself The SCO Group since the SCO Unix products were still their greatest source of revenue due to the large installed base they had. That entity soon started the SCO-Linux controversies.

Those familiar with the Santa Cruz Operation, including those who worked there and those who wrote about it, became protective of that company's reputation, especially given the possible name confusion regarding the role The SCO Group played in the attacks on Linux.[40][51][77] As former Santa Cruz Operation employee wrote later about The SCO Group, "I'll spare you the sordid legal details, but by then, it was no longer our SCO."[40]

Company culture edit

Santa Cruz atmosphere edit

"The Santa Cruz Operation ... thoroughly reflected the ethos of the community for which it was named. ... SCO probably could have been a better-run company. My memory is that the stock analysts were fairly definite on that point, but it wouldn't have been nearly so much fun."

—Industry writer David Coursey in 2004.[51]

From its inception and co-founding by UC Santa Cruz graduate Doug Michels, the company drew upon the readily available technical talent who chose to remain in the central California coastal town of Santa Cruz after graduating. But the town and university affected the company as well. SCO was at the center of the Santa Cruz tech scene, with many employees moving from it to other tech companies or vice versa.[40][53] Some of the feel of the SCO offices was carried forward in coworking facilities later set up in Santa Cruz by two former SCO employees.[240]

New products were promoted with mock film posters.[51] The Vice President of Marketing and Communications was, through much of the 1980s and early 1990s, Bruce Steinberg, who was an artist and musician in the San Francisco area music scene,[241] whose credits included having designed the "flying toasters" cover of the Jefferson Airplane's 1973 live album Thirty Seconds Over Winterland.[51]

 
End-of-day meetings were held on these rooftops, here seen in 1999 from the hills behind them (center-right is 425 Encinal; on the left, mostly obscured, is 400 Encinal).

The Santa Cruz Operation name itself brought comments; one Canadian industry writer called it "One of the coolest company names I ever came across since entering this business".[242]

From its earliest days through to its last ones, The Santa Cruz Operation was known for reflecting the casual ambience of its namesake town.[228] Dress was casual to the point where some staffers went barefoot.[17] There was beer in the office, end-of-day meetings held on Encincal Street roofs, and an outdoor hot tub at the Mission Street office (dating from the facility's previous existence as a holistic health clinic) that was used during the day or for late-night, after-work parties.[105][53] One former employee said years later of her experience there, "It was a family. We played hard, but we also worked hard. I don't think I've worked anywhere since that's had that kind of feel."[105] The SCO reputation was exemplified by an oft-related story of a time where the company had to put out a rule that "clothing must be worn during office hours," caused by an instance where someone walking in from the hot tub had not done so and a potential corporate partner had been paying a visit.[77][53]

Over 500 former Santa Cruz Operation employees held a reunion at the Cocoanut Grove venue in Santa Cruz in 2012.[105]

SCO Forum edit

Beginning in 1987, SCO hosted an annual Summer conference for the international Unix community. Called SCO Forum, it was held on the University of California, Santa Cruz's scenic redwood-forested campus overlooking Monterey Bay, drew some 2000–3000 attendees, and lasted for much of a week.[243][80][244]

Featured speakers over the years included Douglas Adams,[245] Scott Adams, Dave Barry,[246] Clifford Stoll, John Perry Barlow, Linus Torvalds, Andy Grove (Intel), Michael Swavely (Compaq), Steve Ballmer (Microsoft), and Scott McNealy (Sun Microsystems).[247] Musical entertainment included concerts by Jefferson Starship, Tower of Power, Roger McGuinn, Jan & Dean, The Kingsmen, The Surfaris, and Deth Specula.[248]

Due to its useful content and its relaxed, fun atmosphere, SCO Forum became known as one of the best such conferences to go to in the industry and was viewed fondly by those who attended.[249][250][51] It was the largest tech event in the Santa Cruz area and made a multi-million dollar impact on the local economy.[251]

Palookaville webcasts edit

Following the first live Internet concert in 1994, SCO continued in that tradition by sponsoring and producing a series of live Internet webcasts from the popular Santa Cruz night club Palookaville. These webcasts demonstrated the use of UnixWare 7 as a real-time audio and video webcasting server utilizing RealAudio and RealVideo technologies from RealNetworks.[252]

Trapping a hacker edit

SCO was a target of one of the most publicized security hackers of the 1980s and 1990s, Kevin Mitnick, who broke into the company's systems in 1987.[253] SCO's staff detected his intrusions and engaged in exchanges with him that allowed them to track his activities.[254] After about a week of this, it appeared that the intruder was trying to modify or copy Xenix code.[255] Authorities having been notified, the phone line Mitnick was using for the intrusions was discovered and he was arrested.[255] He reached a deal to plead to a misdemeanor for which he did no jail time,[253] but it was his first conviction as an adult.[255] SCO officials agreed not to sue him if he would explain his hacking techniques to them.[254] But when a SCO staffer traveled to meet him, he was uncommunicative.[254][255] In any case, Mitnick soon continued his intruder activities against other companies' systems.[253]

SCO Follies edit

From 1985 to 2001, the company hosted a Winter Solstice party at the Cocoanut Grove in Santa Cruz featuring a live musical show known as "The SCO Follies". This was a fully scripted and produced satire skewering SCO management and the high-tech industry. It featured live action, musical numbers, and videos.[256] On September 22, 2012, the SCO Alumni Association hosted the SCOGala Reunion party at the Cocoanut Grove, which included the first SCO Follies since 2001. Some 500 former employees, friends, and family attended the event.

Year Title Description
1985 Star Trek Scripts in hand, early SCO employees go where no company has gone before.
1986 unknown -
1987 unknown -
1988 Cheers Sometimes you want to go where no-one knows your login name.
1989 Larry Wants an Ad Exasperated with Bruce Steinberg's hairbrained ideas, Larry Michels asks employees to submit concepts for a new ad campaign.
1990 Late Night with Doug Michels SCO licenses the "Late Night" format from GE with Doug as host. Guests include the XENIX Colonel, Michael J. Foxplus (promoting "Backup to the Future II"), SCO's own Princess of Purple, and (direct from the mail room) "Elvis".
1991 KODT SCO launches a cable television channel that requires a telethon to raise funds for the equally cash-strapped organization (operating under the banner of "almost" public television).
1992 Archaeological Dig The year is 2100 and the world has only recently recovered from a catastrophic era known as "The Corporate Wars". Drs. Dave Loman and Jane Greenleaf are recovering artifacts from the original SCO site in New Santa Cruz. The archaeologists are working under the supervision of an overbearing AI known as the NED 9.0.1 Project Management System, and Michelle Michels, descendant of the founders of SCO. With a little hacking, a kinder, wackier NED makes for a much less stressful work environment.
1993 How to Succeed in the Software Business Job applicant Grace Hopper joins the company via social engineering. With the help of a book on the software business, Grace hopscotches across the SCO org chart with stints in Manufacturing, Support, Engineering, Sales, and Marketing. Meanwhile, VP and co-founder Doug Michels is rescued from a car crash and imprisoned by a deranged ex-SCO employee named Annie Wilkes. Grace is ultimately made CEO, but turns it down for a better job. This show includes the infamous "Die Hard" video by late Follies action director Peter (Israel) Rosencrantz. In the current climate, it's hard to picture a CEO giving permission for employees to parade through the building carrying automatic weapons, let alone appearing in the video himself. But Swedish-born Lars Turndal sat for an hour with guns trained on him by some wacky Americans as if he'd been doing it all his life.
1994 The Phantom of the Operation Software engineer Eric T. Claudin runs afoul of evil VP Edwin Vincent Leach, who is bent on SCO's destruction. Disfigured in a hot tub "accident" arranged by Leach, Eric becomes the Phantom, a dark figure obsessed with saving the firm. Once again, then-CEO Lars Turndal proved he was a real sport and consented to appear in his second (and last) video, one that roasted the executive team for trying to censor the Usenet feed. Brian Moffet produced the stained-glass style panorama that opens the show.
1995 FCS Can Wait For the uninitiated, FCS is "First Customer Ship," the magic goal of the product development cycle. Based on the films "Here Comes Mr. Jordan" and Heaven Can Wait," Engineering manager Jo Pendleton is hurled into the great void ahead of schedule. Bodies must be swapped and Heaven & Earth must be moved so that Jo can complete her project of a lifetime, "SCO DoomBugger".
1996 UNIX Won't Die After a series of high-profile incidents involving glitches in the UNIX operating system (namely Apollo 13, Three Mile Island, and the Exxon Valdez), James Bond tracks the SPECTRE of his nemesis Ernst Stavro Blofeld into the hallways of SCO. Along for the ride is the mysterious Tilly Masterson (sister of the woman who was suffocated in paint by the nefarious Goldfinger). Software engineer Fox Mulder and Dana Sculley ("a schmuck from Legal") have stumbled onto the UNIX plot and are suspicious of Bond's presence. This show was the first to include digital compositing (a couple of laser beams and explosions). These early steps were taken on a Miro DC20 video card and Adobe Premiere purchased with pooled funds. Bill Welch created these effects and Mike Almond provided the opening Star Wars animation using Caligari TrueSpace. Thereafter, nearly all the effects for Follies were created digitally.
1997 Taming of the CEO A Shakespearean romp where Viola Murch, a top female director who despairs of ever becoming a VP, decides to disguise herself as a man. She learns that the top floor is a far stranger place than she imagined. This show included a mock preview for a show called "Sliders" about parallel SCO universes. This marked the full use of digital effects and compositing. Mike Almond was responsible for creating such 3D items as a phalanx of Imperial Stormtroopers and a streaking Millennium Falcon.
1998 A Solstice Carol The story of Ezekiel Kludge, a crusty longtime SCO manager who re-discovers the true meaning of SCO.
1999 The Wizard of OCS IBM engineering manager Dorothy Gale is transported into the wacky world of OCS, where she meets a Marketeer who wants to lose his brain, A Salesman who wants to get rid of his heart, and an Engineer who wants to get rid of his life.
2000 Willy Wonka and the Software Factory

Support specialist Charlotte Bucket dreams of visiting SCO's Software Factory and Willy Wonka, the "Chief Geek" who no-one has seen for years. It's an adventure populated with Corpa Lorpas, Waffling Precompensators, Paleoatavistic Patch Pellucidators, and Everlasting Spamstoppers. Not to mention Fizzy Linux stocks. And some arrogant, selfish, and greedy adult children get their comeuppance as well.

2001 Fiddler on the 425 Roof The "final" SCO Follies occurred shortly after Caldera Systems purchased the Santa Cruz Operation. Thus the show's theme is change, with Caldera Systems as the Cossacks. The show opens with the "Dawn of Spam" sequence adapted from Stanley Kubrick's classic odyssey. The mood of the "Linux Company" finale was subsequently overturned when the radically downsized, later-named "SCO Group" turned against Linux.
2012 Raiders of the Lost Archive When two members of a secret SCO organization are murdered, the SCOllegium assigns a team of ex-SCOites to find out who is responsible.

Alliances edit

 
The SCO Partner Conference was a yearly conference held for Santa Cruz Operation partners in the United Kingdom and sometimes elsewhere. The 2000 edition took place at a hotel in Stratford-upon-Avon with the SCO flag flying in front of it.

SCO was a primary partner in several industry alliances, intended to promote SCO operating system technology as a de facto standard for emerging hardware platforms. The most notable of these were:

None of these alliances were ultimately successful.

SCO was also part of 1993's COSE initiative, a more successful and broadly supported initiative to create an open and unified UNIX standard.

SCO was a founding member of 86open (1997–1999), hosting the first meeting of the Unix on Intel standards effort.

See also edit

References edit

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  245. ^ . Katharine Hammer. July 23, 1999. Archived from the original on December 10, 2008. Retrieved May 20, 2008. Speaking at the 1997 SCO Forum, Douglas Adams said "The difference between us and a computer is that, the computer is blindingly stupid, but it is capable of being stupid many, many million times a second."
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  251. ^ Pittman, Jennifer (August 17, 1997). "Techies turn out for SCO forum". Santa Cruz Sentinel. p. D1 – via Newspapers.com.
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External links edit

  • The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. (archived web site sco.com from to )
  • www.ocston.com Alumni directory for the former Santa Cruz Operation
  • Youtube.com: Motibloc's video account, with collection of SCO Follies videos
  • The Santa Cruz Operation's timeline of its own history, 1999
  • Jorn Barger's Timeline of GNU/Linux and Unix, 2002
  • David P. Bianco, "The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.", International Directory of Company Histories, 2000, as hosted at Encyclopedia.com
  • SCO Company History at the Operating System Documentation Project, 2006
  • William Bader's SCO History site, 2009

santa, cruz, operation, this, article, about, original, company, later, users, name, group, usually, known, pronounced, either, individual, letters, word, american, software, company, based, santa, cruz, california, that, best, known, selling, three, unix, ope. This article is about the original SCO company For the later users of the name see SCO Group The Santa Cruz Operation Inc usually known as SCO 1 pronounced either as individual letters or as a word was an American software company based in Santa Cruz California that was best known for selling three Unix operating system variants for Intel x86 processors Xenix SCO UNIX later known as SCO OpenDesktop and SCO OpenServer and UnixWare The Santa Cruz Operation Inc Company typePrivate until 1993 Public after 1993 Traded asNasdaq SCOCIndustryComputer softwareFounded1979FounderLarry MichelsDoug MichelsDefunct2001Fate2001 sold off Unix assets and renamed as Tarantella Inc SuccessorTarantella Inc HeadquartersSanta Cruz California United StatesNumber of locationsMurray Hill New JerseyToronto CanadaWatford EnglandCambridge EnglandLeeds Englandmany regional officesKey peopleLarry MichelsLars TurndalAlok MohanDoug MichelsProductsXenixSCO UNIXSCO OpenDesktopSCO OpenServerUnixWareVision97TarantellaRevenue 224 million peak 1999 Number of employees1 300 peak 1991 Websitewww wbr sco wbr comCommemorative plaque celebrating twenty years in business for Santa Cruz Operation listing important milestones along the waySCO was founded in 1979 by Larry Michels and his son Doug Michels and began as a consulting and Unix porting company An early involvement with Microsoft led to SCO making a product out of Xenix on Intel based PCs The fundamental insight that led to SCO s success was that there was a large market for a standard open systems operating system on commodity microprocessor hardware that would give business applications computing power and throughput that previously was only possible with considerably more expensive minicomputers SCO built a large community of value added resellers that would eventually become 15 000 strong and many of its sales to small and medium sized businesses went through those resellers This community was exemplified by the annual SCO Forum conference held in a scenic setting that reflected the company s Santa Cruz culture SCO also had corporate customers in the replicated sites space where a SCO based system was deployed in each of a retail or restaurant chain s stores Despite seeing rapid growth in terms of revenues SCO tended to have high research and development costs and was never consistently profitable either before or after going public in 1993 SCO bought two former Xenix outfits the Software Products Group within Logica in 1986 and HCR Corporation in 1990 thereby gaining development offices in Watford England and Toronto Canada During the mid 1990s SCO acquired two further UK companies IXI Limited in Cambridge and Visionware in Leeds which led to a suite of client to Unix integration products and then the Tarantella product line SCO s operating system technology moved from Xenix to System V Release 3 as reflected by the products SCO Open Desktop and SCO OpenServer In 1995 SCO bought the System V Release 4 and UnixWare business from Novell and in collaboration with several hardware partners the New Jersey development office it gained in the deal led a series of enhancements to the UnixWare product aimed at the high end enterprise and data center spaces Beginning in the late 1990s SCO faced increasingly severe competitive pressure on one side from Microsoft s Windows NT and its successors and on the other side from the free and open source Linux In 2001 the Santa Cruz Operation sold its rights to Unix and its Unix divisions to Caldera Systems After that the corporation retained only its Tarantella product line and changed its name to Tarantella Inc Caldera Systems became Caldera International and then changed its name to The SCO Group which has created some confusion between the two companies The company described here is the original Santa Cruz Operation Although generally referred to simply as SCO up to 2001 it is now sometimes referred to as old SCO Santa Cruz or SCO Classic to distinguish it from The SCO Group to whom the U S trademark SCO was transferred 2 Contents 1 Early history 1 1 Origin 1 2 Unix porting company 2 Middle history 2 1 Growth years with Xenix on Intel 2 2 Relations with Microsoft 2 3 SCO UNIX and Open Desktop 2 4 Applications and SCO Office Portfolio 2 5 ACE and near insolvency 2 6 Going public 2 7 PizzaNet SCO Global Access first Internet concert 2 8 Everest 2 9 Client Integration Division 3 Later history 3 1 The Novell SCO HP deal of 1995 3 2 Gemini and the UDK 3 3 Big E and DCAP 3 4 Tarantella product 3 5 Customers and financial state 3 6 Monterey 3 7 Y2K surge and recede 4 Final history 4 1 Asset sale and change of name 4 2 Aftermath 5 Company culture 5 1 Santa Cruz atmosphere 5 2 SCO Forum 5 3 Palookaville webcasts 5 4 Trapping a hacker 5 5 SCO Follies 6 Alliances 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly history editOrigin edit nbsp The origins of the company and its culture came in part from the University of California Santa Cruz shown here in 1980 SCO was founded in 1979 in Santa Cruz California by Larry Michels and his son Doug Michels as a computer consulting company that focused on both technology and management considerations 3 Larry Michels 48 years old at the time was an electrical engineer who had gone into the aerospace industry in Los Angeles 4 He had then founded a credit verification company Credifier Corporation which he sold to TRW Inc for whom he subsequently served as a vice president for ten years 5 Larry Michels was first cousin of another technology entrepreneur Allen Michels 6 Towards the end of that time Michels became head of the Advanced Products Laboratory for TRW Electronics 7 and relocated to Santa Cruz to run it remotely from there 8 9 As part of this 10 Michels was involved with a telephony business TRW Vidar This was a company based in Mountain View California that TRW had acquired and that was a part of TRW Electronics 11 TRW Vidar was a pioneer in digital telephone switches 12 and also an early user of Version 6 Unix in its development environment 13 Michels felt that TRW as a whole did not understand the rapid change that computers were bringing to businesses or what it had with Vidar They thought they were buying a telephony business they thought that telephony was telephony but they really were computers Unless you approached them as being computers you didn t end up with anything 10 He then left TRW to do management consulting work 4 thinking as he later said that if TRW was having so much trouble it was probably an interesting business helping companies go about making these transitions 10 As a result of this connection some have considered The Santa Cruz Operation to have been an offshoot of TRW Vidar 14 Doug Michels 25 years old at the time 4 had graduated from the University of California Santa Cruz in 1976 with a degree from their department of computer and information science 8 He had then started his own consulting operation focusing on technical work 4 The two saw some commonalities in their consulting endeavors and decided to join forces to reduce overhead 4 They chose to stay in Santa Cruz both because of the relaxed lifestyle there and because the university would provide a ready supply of technically suitable employees 15 6 By some sources The Santa Cruz Operation Inc was incorporated in January 1979 16 The name came from Larry Michels time as head of the TRW advanced research group when the remote outpost had been known as the Santa Cruz operation 8 The Michelses decided to use that for the name of their new firm 8 and the name was retained in the years that would follow because it told people where they were coming from 17 Unix porting company edit nbsp SCO s first offices were in downtown Santa Cruz about 2 5 of a mile distant along the right side of this viewpointOffices for the new firm were established at 500 Chestnut Street in the downtown area of Santa Cruz 18 17 But as Doug Michels conceded in a 2006 interview in terms of what they would be doing We didn t really have an idea 19 Pure consulting work held little ongoing appeal 15 and the notion of helping large businesses manage rapid technological change proved difficult in practice 10 However the Michelses soon became intrigued by the microprocessor revolution then underway in which computer systems based on processors such as the Intel 8080 or the Zilog Z80 could be put together much quicker than the minicomputers of the past 19 In the consulting work they did SCO was dealing with various resellers and small time sharing companies in helping those companies formulate their technology strategies 19 The people at SCO had and further acquired a familiarity with the Unix operating system and its potential for use in the business world 10 3 By early 1981 SCO was selling a report analyzing Unix features and availability based on a poll it had taken of over sixty members of the usr group association 18 Moreover people at SCO realized that since Unix was portable and not controlled by any hardware manufacturer use of it could allow microprocessor based system manufacturers to avoid having to develop a proprietary operating system of their own which they had neither the time nor the expertise to do 19 Accordingly the company decided to focus on custom jobs of porting the Unix system and applications that ran on it 3 Eric S Raymond in his book The Art of Unix Programming which places the start of SCO in 1978 calls SCO the first Unix company 20 although Interactive Systems Corporation which put out the first commercial Unix release as a base for office automation systems in 1977 perhaps has a stronger case 21 22 The first Unix based operating system that SCO made is for the PDP 11 is named DYNIX not to be confused with a same named Unix variant later made by Sequent Computer Systems and is based on Seventh Edition Unix 3 It supports the Tymshare service and by early 1981 was included in Tymshare s DYNASTY computer system offering 23 24 SCO also did a Unix port to the LSI 11 variant of the PDP 11 3 Xenix is a Seventh Edition Unix based version of the operating system that Microsoft worked on initially for the PDP 11 3 SCO first began working with Xenix in 1981 8 In 1982 Microsoft and SCO forged a joint agreement for development and technology exchange with the two companies engineers working together on improvements to Xenix 3 Microsoft was still a small company at the time with perhaps 25 or 50 employees 19 Microsoft and SCO then further engaged Human Computing Resources in Canada and the Software Products Group within Logica in the United Kingdom as part of making further improvements to Xenix and porting Xenix to other platforms 3 In doing so Microsoft gave HCR and Logica the rights to do Xenix ports and license Xenix binaries in those territories 19 In 1983 SCO made a technically difficult port of Xenix to the unmapped Intel 8086 processor earlier 8086 Xenix ports required an off chip MMU and licensed rights from Microsoft to be able to ship its packaged Unix system Xenix for the IBM PC XT 25 This work takes advantage of earlier porting and compilers work that Altos Computer Systems had done for the mapped 16 bit Intel architecture 19 The resulting system is binary compatible with and can run applications built for Altos Xenix systems and was a successful venture for SCO 19 nbsp Museum label for the Apple Lisa notes that it could run Xenix that was SCO s first shrink wrapped product Somewhat in parallel with that SCO and Microsoft also developed the 68000 based Xenix port for the Apple Lisa 3 It has multiuser capability as well as support for virtual terminals for single users 26 SCO also sold applications for Xenix on Lisa including a Uniplex word processor the Multiplan spreadsheet from Microsoft Level II COBOL from Micro Focus and the Informix database software from Relational Database Systems 26 27 28 While the Lisa was not a success in the personal computer marketplace its powerful for its price point processor combined with a relatively inexpensive operating system gave third party vendors an attractive platform for building systems to compete with minicomputers and SCO sold several thousand copies of Xenix for the Lisa 19 This was the first shrink wrapped binary product sold by SCO and its sales convinced SCO of the potential of that kind of product 3 A third target of SCO s Xenix porting work was the DEC Professional 350 27 As Larry Michels said in early 1984 SCO will continue offering custom XENIX adaptions to the large OEM market the Original Equipment Manufacturers who make up SCO s established customer base 27 SCO also sold Unix training 27 By September 1983 SCO had around 60 employees and was already expanding into a second office at 1700 Mission Street in Santa Cruz 17 29 While some of SCO s staff had studied computer science others were coming from backgrounds in linguistics sociology psychology or business 17 Middle history editGrowth years with Xenix on Intel edit nbsp Original company logoIn early 1984 Microsoft and SCO issued a joint announcement about SCO s rights to distribute Xenix within the United States 27 SCO Xenix for the PC XT shipped sometime in 1984 and contains some enhancements from 4 2BSD Unix Micnet local area networking and multiuser support 3 In 1985 SCO worked with AT amp T and Microsoft to test conformance with the System V Interface Definition SVID one of the early Unix standardization efforts 3 In October 1985 SCO announced the availability of Xenix System V for the Intel 8088 based IBM PC XT and the Intel 80286 based IBM PC AT and IBM PC XT 30 The product can support ten remote users via serial ports and was sold with optional packages for software development in C or assembly language and for text processing 30 There had been concern within SCO about the business chances of the 80286 product since IBM had elected to come to market with their own Unix 19 But that IBM effort contracted to Interactive Systems Corporation and called PC IX resulted in a product that was unsuccessful 31 nbsp SCO Xenix System V boot up screenThere had been considerable skepticism in the industry that Unix could ever establish a successful market position on the PC 26 These included beliefs that Unix was inherently large and complex enough that it needed a minicomputer the platform on which it had been developed in order to run effectively 4 As Larry Michels said in early January 1991 We had all the problems of being ahead of the market 6 The company had never been adequately funded as venture capitalists were unenthused by the idea of Unix on a PC cash flow problems resulted and the Michelses used much of their personal savings to keep the company in business 6 4 A key turning point was when Compaq Computer began shipping systems with Unix installed and chose SCO to be their provider 6 Larry Michels tended to focus on the business aspects of the company while Doug Michels focused on technology facets together they became recognized as pioneers of the Unix on PC industry 5 Larry Michels was president of SCO and Doug Michels was as Larry put it the number two person usually with the title of executive vice president but both employees and outside investors were encouraged to treat the two as an indivisible team 32 In December 1986 SCO acquired the Software Products Group division of Logica 33 It became a wholly owned subsidiary the Santa Cruz Operation Limited and the basis for SCO s UK operation 34 19 with its office subsequently being relocated first to Soho 35 and then to Watford outside London 36 By 1993 almost half of SCO s revenues came from outside North America and of that almost half came from the United Kingdom 37 In 1987 the company brought out the SCO Xenix 386 Toolkit which allowed developers to start coding applications and device drivers for the new Intel 80386 processor in addition to the existing 80286 3 Later that year SCO s full release of Xenix for 80386 was made the chip was powerful enough that Xenix running on it could handle some 30 different users 15 SCO provided some basic applications with Xenix 15 But the real value came from the 1 700 other applications that had been developed by value added resellers VARs and independent software vendors ISVs for the platform including such domains as auto parts management medical accounting bakery process control and many others 15 As one retrospective look characterized it Xenix served as a workhorse for small businesses places where you might find a dozen or so dumb terminals and a couple of printers plugged into a system running a small database system It s simple small and stable 38 nbsp The main SCO offices at 425 left and 400 Encincal Street in the Harvey West area of Santa Cruz California as seen in 1997 Behind the buildings are the hills and Pogonip trails By early 1987 SCO had relocated its offices to a building at 400 Encinal Street in an industrial park in the Harvey West area of Santa Cruz 39 the building had been previously occupied by Intel 40 As of a year later SCO employed some 500 people mostly in Santa Cruz and had plans to build a new office building there 15 By early 1991 that new building 425 Encinal Street was holding an open house event for prospective employees 41 The company subsequently established offices in several other buildings in the Harvey West area 40 These included 324 Encinal Street 42 150 Dubois Street 40 and 100 Pioneer Street 43 By the late 1980s fed by strong computer science program that emphasized Unix design and a robust internship program at SCO some 50 to 60 percent of SCO employees were UC Santa Cruz graduates 15 8 SCO now employed some 800 people overall mostly in its Santa Cruz offices but also in the UK office and in one in Washington D C 8 By early 1989 SCO had sold some 350 000 copies of Xenix in total mostly through its channel 8 The company was achieving what the Santa Cruz Sentinel termed explosive growth 8 SCO would subsequently reorient its product on a later technology base 3 However Xenix comprised the largest installed base of any of the early commercial variants of Unix 44 it remained a good seller among some customers 45 and SCO releases of Xenix continued until Xenix 386 version 2 3 4 was put out in 1991 3 Relations with Microsoft edit Microsoft s level of commitment to Xenix was always viewed with some suspicion within the industry 46 It later became clear that by the mid 1980s Microsoft was losing interest in Xenix from their own business perspective 20 both due to the cost of licensing it from AT amp T and because MS DOS was rapidly taking off as a product 47 In February 1989 it was announced that Microsoft was taking a minority investment in SCO by buying an amount less than 20 percent of that company 48 The terms of the agreement which were not publicly disclosed 8 provided SCO with funds that it acutely needed in order to continue to expand in its rapidly growing market 49 The deal put a Microsoft executive on SCO s board of directors 6 that executive Microsoft s chief financial officer Frank Gaudette would play an important role in guiding SCO to become a mature enterprise 50 The deal contained provisions to prevent Microsoft from exercising dominant control over the smaller SCO 6 By some accounts the Microsoft board member often had to be asked to leave discussions when the topic became how SCO could best compete with Microsoft 51 Already on the board since 1987 was another Microsoft veteran Jim Harris 50 who had been a leader of Microsoft s OEM sales efforts 52 We had a very long relationship with Microsoft We were partners we were competitors they invested in us at one point they owned around 20 percent of the company we licensed technology from them we had lawsuits with them we had every type of relationship with Microsoft you can imagine Doug Michels 2012 53 Microsoft s motivation for the purchase has been variously explained as a desire to keep a Xenix technology partner 49 as a hedge against the growth of Unix 6 and as a hedge against the Open Software Foundation 47 Yet another explanation was the one given by Larry Michels in 1991 making reference to the SCO Unix product then being sold The paradox is if you were Microsoft Open Desktop isn t something you want to see succeed But if it doesn t something else will and they would rather see Open Desktop than whatever that would be We pay them royalties 6 Later figures stating the amount that Microsoft actually owned included 16 percent 37 47 14 percent 54 and 11 percent 55 Microsoft did not fully exit its position in SCO until 2000 47 In any case intellectual property rights were not transferred in the 1989 agreement and SCO would continue to pay Microsoft royalties for Xenix and Unix technologies 6 Not until 1997 was SCO able to reach an agreement with Microsoft that relieved SCO of the obligation to include Microsoft code and pay royalties on that code regardless of whether it was used or not in SCO products 55 And that only came after SCO filed a complaint against Microsoft for violating European Union competition law a complaint that was ruled valid by the European Commission 56 SCO UNIX and Open Desktop edit Needing to create a product from a more recent branch from the Unix family tree Unix System V Release 3 SCO together with Microsoft and Interactive Systems Corporation worked during 1987 and 1988 to develop the System V 386 Release 3 2 version which adds the ability to run existing Xenix binary applications on System V without requiring recompilation 3 44 This capability makes use of the new Intel Binary Compatibility Standard iBCS developed by Intel AT amp T and SCO 57 The AT amp T release of System V 386 Release 3 2 was announced at SCO Forum in 1988 but further work was needed by SCO to incorporate Xenix device drivers before SCO could release it as a product 58 SCO UNIX full name SCO UNIX System V 386 Release 3 2 0 had first customer ship in June 1989 59 this became the basis for commercial successor to SCO Xenix Based on an agreement forged with AT amp T the previous year it was also the first SCO operating system to carry the Unix word itself in the product name 3 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org SCO revenues by year in millions of dollars 6 60 43 61 In early 1990 the integrated product SCO Open Desktop began shipping 62 It features on top of SCO UNIX System V 386 several critical functionalities a graphical user interface based on the X Window System and Open Software Foundation Motif toolkit TCP IP networking support for the NFS network file system and OS 2 LAN Manager database support and Merge 386 for running DOS based applications 3 63 6 Regarding OSF Motif this is its first appearance in a commercial product 63 and Open Desktop became the first graphical Unix for an Intel 32 bit processor that was packaged in shrink wrapped form 64 SCO used technology partners for much of this work The graphical desktop itself is the X desktop one from IXI Limited 65 The TCP IP networking stack and NFS implementation come from Lachman Associates 66 while Open Systems Interconnection software comes from Retix Inc 67 The relational database manager included is Ingres 62 The Merge functionality comes from Locus Computing Corporation 68 Version 3 2 2 of SCO Unix and Open Desktop came out in mid 1990 it contains various fixes and improvements for problems found in the field 45 However Open Desktop did not make inroads on the personal computer market as SCO Unix s system resource requirements were strenuous and there were few commonly used PC applications available for it 64 Beginning in the late 1980s AT amp T and Sun Microsystems worked on a merge of Xenix BSD SunOS and System V Release 3 features with the result being known as UNIX System V Release 4 44 SCO UNIX and Open Desktop remained based on System V Release 3 but eventually added home grown versions of a number of the features of Release 4 22 Initially supplemented by some engineers who transferred from SCO s headquarters operation in Santa Cruz 34 the ex Logica group in Watford became one of the major development sites for SCO and over the next few years did the operating system kernel development work behind the subsequent SCO OpenDesktop and SCO OpenServer product releases 3 It later did engineering work in networking security escalations and other areas in addition to being the sales marketing and customer engineering hub for SCO s EMEA region 69 SCO acquired the Toronto Canada based HCR Corporation in 1990 70 Since their interactions in the early Xenix days HCR had become Canada s leading commercial Unix platform developer 71 The HCR acquisition allowed SCO to improve its development tools offerings especially for Open Desktop 72 SCO Canada took over work on the Microsoft C compiler that dates back to Xenix days but can produce binaries for either Xenix or Unix In addition the SCO Open Desktop Development System also offers the AT amp T pcc compiler 73 here called rcc but it can only compile for Unix 74 SCO Canada continued to sell HCR s Cfront based C product which by 1991 had an estimated 450 licensed sites using it 75 The Toronto site also took on some porting and integration work 76 nbsp A thick volume Guide to Software Hardware and Services for the SCO System V Environment 1990SCO had a large technical publications operation at this time with substantial staffing in each of the Santa Cruz Toronto and Watford offices who as a group published on the order of 30 000 pages of documentation on a 18 month release cycle 77 One of the tech writers at Watford from 1991 to 1995 was science fiction author Charles Stross 77 and his experiences in that office would provide some of the setting for his 2000s work The Atrocity Archives 78 Collectively Xenix and SCO UNIX became the most installed flavor of Unix due to the popularity of the x86 architecture Hardware manufacturers that manufactured Intel based systems and that resold a SCO operating system on it included not just Compaq but also DEC Tandy Computers Siemens Nixdorf Olivetti Unisys and Hewlett Packard 6 Especially significant were those systems with multiprocessor capability such as the Compaq SystemPro 6 for which the SCO MPX multiprocessor extension to SCO UNIX had been delivered in 1990 based on development work that SCO did in conjunction with the firm Corollary Inc 79 This effort produced the first version of Unix to support the symmetric multiprocessing capability of Compaq s 3 The primary market segment for SCO Unix was small businesses such as real estate offices or florists to take two examples where specialized dealers who were familiar with a particular application domain built or assembled customized software for that domain and then sold that as a turnkey solution to the business 60 SCO Unix was also used by chains such as Radio Shack and Taco Bell 60 SCO capitalized on the increasingly prevalent open systems movement of the time which held that a combination of interoperability portability and open software standards should result in computer users should not being locked into any one computer company s product 6 4 80 Moreover Doug Michels became an effective and convincing advocate for the open systems idea 6 The premise in SCO s case was that an industry standard operating system for industry standard hardware capable of handling the kind of multi tasking multi user workload that MS DOS could not would give customers a compelling offering that previously was thought only possible with considerably more expensive minicomputers 6 4 By early 1991 The New York Times was publishing a profile of SCO based around the notion that it might become the next Microsoft 6 Applications and SCO Office Portfolio edit While SCO operating systems were often the basis of vertical market software offerings by others 81 SCO had long desired to create additional horizontal market software applications for its operating system product as part of further popularizing it 60 Thus SCO had provided some basic applications with Xenix including database graphics a word processor and a spreadsheet 15 In 1988 these applications were bundled together as part of an offering known as SCO Office Portfolio which serves as an integrated environment for office automation on Xenix SCO Unix and SCO Open Desktop 81 82 The portfolio primarily comprises SCO Lyrix a word processor SCO Professional a spreadsheet and SCO Integra an SQL based relational database 83 The first two were developed by SCO 84 while SCO Integra is based on an SQL engine from Coromandel Industries 85 augmented by a 4GL called Accell from Unify Corporation 86 Linking them together was the SCO Manager which has a character based but multi windowed interface 87 It provides desktop tools such as mail calendaring and chat an expandable menu system and a clipboard mechanism for transmitting information between applications 83 84 The system administration interface for SCO Unix itself also adopted the Portfolio Manager interface 88 Early 1990 also saw the release of Microsoft Word version 5 0 for Xenix and SCO Unix which was also available as part of SCO Office Portfolio 89 It has functionality equivalent to Word for DOS 89 and was marketed to government agencies and other organizations running multiuser office systems 90 This was followed in early 1991 by Word 5 1 for SCO Unix which has graphical user interface support 91 As part of adapting Word to Unix SCO made various enhancements for multiuser support and workgroup related features 91 SCO had visions of selling its applications on platforms other than its own In late 1988 SCO and Sun Microsystems announced that SCO Office Portfolio would be ported to Sun 3 workstations running SunOS 92 And in mid 1990 SCO made its Word for Unix available for AT amp T 3B2 and AT amp T 6386 systems 90 91 One of the offerings in the SCO Office Portfolio was SCO FoxBase a version of FoxBase that is explicitly purposed as a look alike to the popular dBase III database software for MS DOS 87 89 And even SCO s advertisements had called SCO Professional a workalike of the popular Lotus 1 2 3 spreadsheet 84 This resulted in problems when in July 1990 Lotus Development Corporation sued SCO for copyright infringement as one of several such actions that Lotus took against its imitators and competitors 93 The suit was settled out of court a year later in a victory for Lotus SCO agreed to stop all sales and licensing of SCO Professional and instead recommend that customers use 1 2 3 94 95 In the end SCO had neither the market share nor the sales ability to compete on applications with the major players in that area such as Microsoft and Lotus 54 Accordingly staffing level and expenses for application work were sharply reduced in 1991 60 and again in 1993 94 54 The final version of Microsoft Word for SCO Unix for instance was 5 1 1 it was eventually withdrawn as a product by SCO in 1996 96 ACE and near insolvency edit Besides Microsoft venture capitalists owned about 20 percent of SCO by 1991 meaning that the Michelses owned a majority of the company 6 4 although by 1993 the Michelses share was stated as being about one third 37 These venture capital firms included Morgan Stanley Accel Partners Chancellor Capital and Wolfensohn amp Company 37 nbsp SCO s Toronto development office was housed in this building here seen several years after the site was shut down During the late 1980s and early 1990s analysts said that given its revenue SCO should be more profitable than it was 49 Indeed SCO had never been able to show profits on a consistent basis 60 through the end of fiscal 1991 SCO had accumulated a total loss of 31 million over its entire existence 37 SCO had high staffing levels with for instance the 106 million revenue for 1990 going along with 1 300 employees which was twice the level a typical software company of its era would have had 6 One analyst said that SCO is run like a university a family run university not a company 6 Commenting on the company s efforts to write applications for Unix themselves another analyst said It s a company that attacks in all directions 60 In part due to this kind of criticism the Michelses said in late 1990 that they saw significant downsides to going public and preferred to remain private 6 4 One former employee recalled that Larry Michels ran SCO like it was a downhill skier racing out of control He liked to think the company was literally like that the fastest guy was always a little bit out of control SCO was always a little out of control 5 The late 1980s saw considerable interest in RISC based processor architectures in comparison to Intel s existing CISC based approach and there was particular interest in the R3000 and R4000 processors from MIPS Computer Systems 97 Major hardware vendors such as Digital Equipment Corporation were switching over to RISC based systems In April 1991 the Advanced Computing Environment initiative was announced 97 There were a number of companies involved but in term of the major players it consisted of Compaq Microsoft MIPS Computer Systems DEC and the Santa Cruz Operation 98 It had the goal of building the next generation commodity computing platform around the MIPS processor 97 Microsoft s role was to supply a version of OS 2 for the processor 97 this OS 2 version would become the basis of Windows NT 98 SCO s job was to supply the Unix operating system for the processor 97 The work consisted of taking DEC s OSF 1 variant of Unix as one starting point SCO s Open Desktop as another and adding in elements of DEC s previous Ultrix flavor to produce a Unix for the ACE platform 99 SCO created a top level business unit within the company to focus on the ACE work and the expected market resulting from it 100 But almost from the beginning the ACE consortium was challenged by the difficulty of large powerful companies with disparate interests working together one German executive from a non member company called ACE an eier legende Wollmilchsau egg laying woolen milk pig 101 By November 1991 SCO s work was reported as six months behind schedule 102 At the same time indications were reported in trade media the business press and the general press that the ACE project as a whole was in trouble 102 60 103 In April 1992 a year after the start the project fell apart SCO publicly acknowledged that it had abandoned work on the Unix for MIPS and had withdrawn from the consortium no longer confident that the project would succeed or was even necessary given improvements in CISC processor speed from Intel 104 80 Compaq withdrew as well and MIPS Computer Systems was in the middle of being bought out 104 Only some of the heavy engineering expenditures that SCO had spent on ACE were recoverable Larry Michels said We learned a lot out of ACE We learned the hard way 80 We knew how to code we knew how to market and sell and we knew how to party We were growing like crazy and didn t know quite when to stop Doug Michels in 2012 reflecting upon SCO s history 105 As a whole during this period SCO s expenses were too high and the company was undercapitalized 4 And by several accounts during 1991 the company came close to becoming bankrupt 4 54 The year saw a large scale reduction in staffing levels from that peak of 1 300 with around 12 percent of the workforce being let go across two rounds of layoffs together with a company wide reorganization that involved new managers being brought in from other technology companies 60 80 37 Especially targeted for elimination were the projects to build applications for Unix 60 Following these changes SCO showed a profit during its fiscal 1992 and the first half of its fiscal 1993 37 In 1992 Software Magazine wrote that SCO had long been the only major player in this market but noted that Univel and SunSoft were both introducing Unix on Intel products 106 Both of these were from better financed companies 60 But the sales of UnixWare 1 0 turned out to be modest 107 and SCO s share of the Unix on Intel market was around 65 percent in mid 1993 37 For 1993 overall SCO sold around 185 000 copies of its Unix product while Novell which acquired Univel sold around 35 000 of UnixWare and Sun s sales of Solaris on Intel were insignificant 108 PC Magazine in a lengthy review the following year of different operating system choices for the Intel architecture wrote that SCO had a dominant position in the Unix on Intel market 22 The magazine added that with its Tyrannosaurus Rex like presence and more than 3 000 applications available independent software vendors interested in Unix on PCs invariably made products that were SCO Unix conformant 22 Going public edit By the summer of 1992 it was clear that SCO was intending to go public in the near future and a number of investment bankers brokers and analysts attended that year s SCO Forum conference with that possibility in mind 80 Larry Michels now viewed becoming a public company as crucial as it would give SCO greater access to investment capital and because it would make SCO a more credible vendor to large corporations 80 There was also a desire to let employees benefit from the stock options they held 37 At the same time Michels had become prominent in the local business scene in Santa Cruz County 109 arguing that the area had to be more aggressive about fostering economic development 80 110 At one point he asked SCO employees to attend a public hearing in support of a controversial plan for an outlet mall in which he was an investor 80 110 He was also a sponsor of several charitable events and philanthropies in the Santa Cruz area 109 On December 5 1992 the San Jose Mercury News broke the story that three former executive secretaries at SCO had filed a lawsuit two days earlier against Larry Michels and SCO for sexual harassment 111 112 The suit which named the women involved and was filed in Santa Cruz County Superior Court stated that Michels had on repeated occasions propositioned or groped the women and had forced them into kissing him at work 111 In charging a sexually hostile work environment 113 the women characterized Michels behavior as oppressive demeaning sexually belittling intimidating exploitive and abusive 114 When one of the women had complained about Michels to the human resources department she said she was told that s just Larry being Larry and that the onus was on her to come up with a proposal on how she should be treated and present it to Michels 110 One of the women had been fired another had quit her job and the third had been transferred to another position after filing a complaint with the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing 114 When asked for his reaction by a reporter Michels denied the allegations in the suit and said Did it say I raped anybody Did it say I pinned anybody down 114 In response to the accusations hugging and kissing the women against their will at work Michels said How serious a crime is that 114 And asked if he regretted any of his actions he said I certainly regret that I hired those three girls 110 On December 15 a fourth named former executive secretary joined the lawsuit saying among other allegations that Michels had taken her to a remote wooded property he owned and tried to force himself on her and that she ran away for fear of being raped 112 Public attention to sexual harassment had increased following the previous year s Clarence Thomas Anita Hill hearings 109 and complaints had been filed with the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing against other high level male executives at SCO as well 115 On December 16 the board of directors of SCO announced that it had appointment one of its members Jim Harris to investigate the situation at SCO and that the board was extremely distressed by the recent allegations made against the company and its president 115 On December 21 1992 less than three weeks after initial lawsuit was filed Larry Michels resigned as chief executive of SCO 116 Harris became interim president of the company 117 The rapid sequence of events triggered what the Santa Cruz Sentinel termed a period of internal turmoil and depression within the organization 117 A month later Lars Turndal took over as president and chief executive officer of SCO 117 Turndal originally from Sweden had overseen the large growth in SCO s European operation over the preceding six years 54 Harris became chairman of the board while Doug Michels remained executive vice president and also became chief technical officer 117 Programs begun by Harris and continued by Turndal sought to introduce to the company externally provided classes in cultural sensitivity and to establish an internal diversity council 117 In early April 1993 the sexual harassment suit was settled out of court 118 with the four women being awarded a total of 1 25 million 113 At the same time SCO filed the necessary papers with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission to go public 50 Prosecutors in Santa Cruz County considered whether criminal charges should be filed against Larry Michels but after a two month investigation decided not to 119 Michels received a 354 000 golden handshake from SCO which brought some criticism from employment rights advocates 120 Michels never returned to the company although he kept in touch with what was going on via his son and died of a stroke in 1999 5 The initial public offering for The Santa Cruz Operation Inc took place on May 27 1993 121 The stock traded on NASDAQ under the symbol SCOC 122 The stock s offering price was 121 2 and it closed at 123 8 meaning that it did not have the first day jump that hot IPOs are expected to show 121 The firm s initial stretch as a public company was difficult 50 54 Two important board members Harris and Microsoft s Gaudette died during 1993 50 54 with Turndal succeeding Harris as chairman 123 By year s end the stock price was around 61 8 or half what it had started at 50 The transitions of this period marked the change in SCO from being an entrepreneur driven company to one driven by the need to behave in a more business like manner and show steady profits 117 54 123 Turndal further jettisoned unprofitable applications and focused on SCO s core Unix business as well as middleware additions to strengthen the platform 54 In December 1994 Turndal was made chair of the board as well as CEO while Alok Mohan was elevated to president and chief operating officer 124 With its first release in mid 1993 Microsoft s server operating system Windows NT became a looming threat to the Unix on Intel market 37 121 SCO had even more commercial competitors in the Unix on Intel space including NCR IBM Sequent SunSoft s Solaris and Novell s UnixWare and each of these is based on SVR4 21 SCO was the only Unix on Intel vendor basing their product on SVR3 2 21 But there were many applications available for OpenServer 21 in part the result of SCO having forged many partnerships with other computer companies 44 Over half of all SCO sales were through VARs who typically used SCO as the basis for an end user application and then bundled the hardware operating system and application as a turnkey solution 107 By the mid 1990s SCO Unix in all its product releases had an installed base of a million systems sold 44 SCO OpenServer had a foothold in the corporate world as well the 1997 edition of the book UNIX Unleashed wrote that It is very popular among corporate internets intranets and has been for many years 21 The book added that Its technical support cannot be matched which is why many corporations choose this commercial OS as their server OS of choice 21 PizzaNet SCO Global Access first Internet concert edit SCO also recognized the importance of the Internet In August 1994 SCO and Pizza Hut announced PizzaNet a pilot program in the Santa Cruz area that allowed consumers to use their own computer to order pizza delivery from a local Pizza Hut restaurant with connection being made over the Internet to a central Pizza Hut server in Wichita Kansas 125 126 The PizzaNet application software was developed by SCO s Professional Services group 127 PizzaNet was based on the first commercially licensed and bundled Internet operating system SCO Global Access 127 SCO was the first commercial Unix system supplier to license the powerful NCSA Mosaic hypertext browser and NCSA HTTPd and the first to ship these technologies from the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign bundled with an operating system for commercial use 128 On August 23 1994 SCO broadcast a live music concert from the UC Santa Cruz s Cowell Courtyard This event part of SCO Forum 1994 is said to be the first time a scheduled live music concert was broadcast over the Internet it was sent over both the Mbone and the emerging World Wide Web 129 130 131 132 The band was Deth Specula a group composed of SCO employees 133 Their first song parodied Grand Funk Railroad s We re an American Band Deth Specula sang We Are an Internet Band with lyrics like We re comin to your town To bring your network down We are an Internet band Everest edit nbsp Interior of an office in the main buildings on Encinal Street in Santa Cruz with the hills of the Pogonip area outside the windowThe next big product release from the company was code named Everest 3 It resulted from three years of labor at SCO s Santa Cruz Watford and Toronto development sites 3 an effort that amounted to 50 million in research and development costs 134 The general thrust of the work was towards supporting the requirements of business critical servers 135 It included adding support for memory mapped files the journaling HTFS filesystem with mirroring and striping support disk compression RAID levels 0 1 and 5 POSIX 1b real time scheduling and semaphores the Advanced Power Management interface and SVID 3 level conformance 3 136 137 135 Everest expanded MP support from 8 to 32 processors 107 Everest has hardware support for 900 different physical machines of which 60 were SMP systems and for some 2 000 peripheral devices 3 Another major new feature of Everest is the SCOadmin system administration tool with both graphical and command line interfaces 136 and software upgrades that can be run either locally or remotely 137 The existence of an administration framework and GUI was considered by InfoWorld writer Jason Pontin to be important in competing with the user friendly qualities of Windows NT 137 Everest was released as SCO OpenServer Release 5 3 The release was celebrated with a corporate event at the Hudson Theatre in New York City on May 9 1995 134 The location was chosen in part to give the product an East Coast corporate veneer rather than a West Coast laid back one 135 As part of the release publicity SCO emphasized they had settled on competing in the server market and had halted any attempt to compete with Windows in the desktop client market 135 Industry analysts were generally impressed with OpenServer 135 Testers of beta releases of the product including Taco Bell which was deploying OpenServer to each of its 4 000 stores were impressed by its reliability 138 nbsp Distributors resellers and the like The channel was vital to SCO s success Although parts of the Unix kernel were rewritten during the Everest project 3 it is still fundamentally the nearly ten year old System V Release 3 2 kernel and as such has some limitations such as not being multithreaded 139 This lack of native threads support would prove a challenge in years to come when certain kinds of modern system software needed to run on the platform 140 OpenServer 5 was compatible with around 8 000 business applications 134 and it was partly a desire to maintain compatibility with existing applications that prevented SCO from making more drastic changes to the operating system 139 Overall on a technical evaluation PC Magazine found OpenServer 5 to be good but not quite as good as Novell s UnixWare 2 product 136 One Unix OEM told PC Week that OpenServer 5 was a good product but it s not a revolutionary product it s an evolutionary product It doesn t quite do the enterprise stuff people are looking for 139 One project which sought to improve OpenServer s technology base was code named MK2 141 Its origins date to 1992 with an agreement between SCO and the French company Chorus Systemes SA for cooperative work on the Chorus microkernel technology in the context of combining OpenServer with a microkernel for use in real time processing environments in telecommunications and other areas 142 The first result of this a dual functionality product called Chorus Fusion for SCO Open Systems Software was released in 1994 143 By 1995 SCO had set up a business unit for the MK2 venture and was spending considerable amounts of engineering resources on what was now a reimplementation of OpenServer to run on top of the Chorus microkernel in what was going to be called the SCO Telecommunications OS Platform 144 145 A primary customer for this work was the Private Communications Systems unit within Siemens AG 141 146 Later in 1995 the MK2 project had to adjust for SCO s acquisition of UnixWare technology from Novell 146 and the goal became to run merged OpenServer UnixWare code on top of Chorus 147 However by early 1997 relations had broken down between SCO Chorus and the customer and the MK2 project was scrapped without having achieved fruition 148 149 Through several changes of corporate ownership SCO OpenServer 5 would remain a supported product into the 2020s 150 On July 1 1995 Lars Turndal retired and Alok Mohan became the company s CEO 151 Mohan s background was in corporate finance and strategic planning with AT amp T Global Information Solutions 151 The equities market immediately reflected changes in SCO financial statements When customers spent more time evaluating OpenServer 5 rather than buying it during the first quarter it was available SCO missed its forecasted earnings and SCO stock lost a quarter of its value 152 Client Integration Division edit Main articles Visionware and IXI Limited In February 1993 SCO acquired IXI Limited a software company in Cambridge UK best known for its X desktop product which formed the graphical basis of Open Desktop 153 In December 1994 SCO bought Visionware of Leeds UK developers of XVision 154 The roles of the two companies were different but complementary as one former SCO UK employee has succinctly summarised IXI specialised in software that ran on Unix and made Unix easier to use Visionware specialised in software that ran on Windows that made Unix easier to use 155 In 1995 SCO combined the two development teams to form the IXI Visionware Ltd subsidiary 156 Later in 1995 the merged business unit was subsumed more fully into its parent and became the Client Integration Division of SCO 155 nbsp Main floor of the SCO Leeds office 1997These acquisitions were part of SCO acknowledging that it did not want to compete with Microsoft on the desktop but rather wanted to put forward a Windows friendly product strategy 50 54 It also fit SCO s idea of the client server model of computing where SCO would offer connectivity and middleware components to support Windows clients talking to SCO servers 157 In May 1997 the Client Integration Division released the Vision97 family of products XVision Eclipse a PC X server VisionFS an SMB server for UNIX TermVision a terminal emulator for Microsoft Windows SuperVision centralised management of users from Windows and SQL Retriever ODBC and JDBC compliant database connectivity software 158 The VisionFS product was developed from scratch by the Cambridge development team the other products were developed by the Leeds development team and were mostly new versions of the existing Visionware products 155 A later release of the suite is branded as Vision2K 159 The Client Integration Division was relatively independent of the rest of SCO for reasons both technical and organizational It ported its code to all major Unix platforms including those of SCO s competitors 159 155 It operated its own web site for some time 42 The SCO Unix channel based sales model did not work well for the Vision products 160 and the client division had its own sales force 155 This was illustrated by SCO having two different subsidiaries in Japan Nihon SCO which dealt with the operating system products and services and SCO K K a joint venture which handled the Vision product line 161 Later history editThe Novell SCO HP deal of 1995 edit nbsp Corporate history in a joke Bjarne Stroustrup the creator of C worked for AT amp T and then USL who made a promotional cardboard cutout figure of himself Novell and then SCO inherited the cutout For some time after the Novell SCO HP deal closed all three companies were sharing the same office space in Florham Park New Jersey In order to demark which corridors were SCO s the Stroustrup cutout was put up with a hat a bolo tie with badge and a SCO business card saying SCOland Sheriff Novell s 1993 acquisition of Unix System Laboratories had never really worked out 162 and by late summer 1995 Novell was looking for a way out of the Unix business 163 On September 20 1995 Novell announced the sale of that business to SCO coincident with a licensing arrangement with Hewlett Packard 164 As part of the deal SCO said that it would merge the SVR4 2 based UnixWare with the SVR3 2 based OpenServer creating a new merged product code named Gemini 164 165 Gemini would then be sold through SCO s channel and reseller operation 164 SCO and HP also said that they would co develop a next generation 64 bit version of Unix for use with Merced the code name for HP and Intel s upcoming 64 bit architecture 166 Some 400 Novell software engineers had been working on UnixWare mostly in an office in Florham Park New Jersey almost all of these engineers joined either SCO or HP 164 166 about a year later the SCO part relocated to offices in Murray Hill New Jersey The part of the deal between Novell and SCO closed on December 6 1995 1 As Doug Michels later reflected in 2006 SCO seized on the idea of buying the Unix business from Novell for three reasons for one we got all the talent from Bell Labs that had created Unix two we got the moral authority around Unix and three we got rid of all the crazy historical licensing problems dating from Unix s origins within AT amp T 19 In order to reduce the price to SCO part of the deal was that SCO agreed to pay a royalty stream back to Novell of UnixWare sales 19 By December 1995 there were already some indications that the three way arrangement was not working out as had been initially advertised 165 The computer industry was not sure that SCO could handle being the primary Unix shepherd 163 The HP project code named White Box focused on making a hybrid environment out of the SRV4 2 based Gemini and the SVR3 2 based HP UX but that effort faced major technical hurdles 165 White Box became the 3DA effort the purpose of which was to unify OpenServer UnixWare and HP UX in some way to produce a resulting product would then become the de facto Unix standard for both existing IA 32 systems and the upcoming IA 64 167 The effort was motivated in part by threat of Windows NT threat taking advantage of splits among Unix providers when 64 bit systems arrived in common use 168 By August 1996 HP and SCO were delivering application programming interface API specifications to various OEMs and ISVs as well as doing a best of breed technology analysis to determine whether Gemini or HP UX would be the going forward source base for a given component 169 Both companies were also doing porting work to Merced using the early version compilers available 169 The effort was still in theory going in early 1997 when HP and SCO were to publish the Lodi set of common programming interfaces for a 64 bit Unix incorporating elements of OpenServer UnixWare and HP UX 168 But little progress had been made on actual implementation with sources for only a few components having been exchanged by the two companies 170 The collaboration failed for both business reasons HP and SCO had differing perceptions of the marketplace and technical ones an inability to produce a common binary Unix for Intel product that could run existing applications from both companies user bases 170 Primary among the technical obstacles were endianness considerations 171 As an InformationWeek story later wrote the three way deal had been a complicated plan that was confusing from the start 163 The terms of the deal between Novell and SCO were uncertain enough that an amendment to the agreement had to be signed in October 1996 163 Even that was not clear enough to preclude an extended legal battle between Novell and The SCO Group during SCO Linux disputes of the 2000s 163 a battle that The SCO Group eventually lost 172 Gemini and the UDK edit Meanwhile SCO focused on Gemini the task of combining the OpenServer and UnixWare product lines on 32 bit systems The fundamental idea behind the Gemini was that SCO could merge OpenServer 5 and UnixWare 2 in a way that would satisfy the requirements of both small businesses and large enterprises and thus keep the existing customer base that SCO had with OpenServer while entering the enterprise space with UnixWare 173 One consequence of the UnixWare acquisition was that the New Jersey office of Novell had a languages and development tools group with more advanced technology than what SCO Canada had been working with including a C compiler based upon the Edison Design Group front end 174 175 and that made the SCO Canada engineering staff largely redundant once the Novell deal was closed As a result the Toronto office was shut down in early 1996 176 nbsp A meeting room in the SCO s Watford England office in 1997 where a UDK related training session for support and escalation staff was being given by New Jersey based staff portions of a UnixWare desktop are being projected What the New Jersey group produced was the Universal Development Kit UDK 174 which was a key element in the question of how to help OpenServer users to make the move to Gemini 177 With the UDK a single build of a single version of an application s source code could produce binaries that would run unaltered on all three of SCO s platforms UnixWare 2 OpenServer 5 and the upcoming Gemini 178 175 The UDK featured more modern C and C compilers and other tools compared to what OpenServer had and included platform specific optimizations for things such as C exception handling 174 The hope was that existing OpenServer developers would switch to using the UDK and thereby get an easy path towards migrating to Gemini 177 Support for the new Java programming language and related Java technologies was also emphasized as a key part of the UDK and the operating system products themselves 179 Over the next several years SCO would add engineering efforts towards making Java an effective vehicle for customers to use on SCO platforms including a mapping of Java threads onto UnixWare light weight processes recognition of Java class files as first class Unix executables as well as adapting a just in time compiler to the original Sun Java virtual machine 179 140 Another announced SCO effort related to Java was PerkUp an infrastructure built on the Java classloader facility that was billed as an additional service for UnixWare 7 that would reduce the total memory and throughput needs when multiple Java server applications were running on a system 180 however PerkUp never emerged as a product and the patent for it ended up with Apple Inc before expiring 181 Initially SCO had made a strong push for Gemini among the SCO user base the August 1996 instance of the annual SCO Forum conference dedicated an extra two days to a series of Gemini Fast Track sessions 182 But by a year later SCO had decided it would not push the migration that quickly although it still expected that within two or three years all users would migrate 177 One SCO executive said We mustn t disenfranchise the OpenServer path those guys SCO resellers are our lifeblood and recalled that a few years earlier SCO resellers had continued to sell Xenix based systems even after SCO had stopped development work on Xenix 177 When released as a product Gemini was called UnixWare 7 173 the 7 was picked to reflect the summed merge of OpenServer 5 and UnixWare 2 183 SCO referred to UnixWare 7 as being based on an SVR5 kernel 184 indicating a significant jump over the existing SVR4 2 although the SVR5 designation was not picked up by the Unix world at large 44 UnixWare 7 was announced in March 1998 at an event in New York 185 SCO committed itself to still maintaining and improving the OpenServer product for a couple of years but made clear that it would never be expanded to 64 bit architectures 173 Thus at that point OpenServer users would have to migrate 186 Big E and DCAP edit nbsp Much of the DCAP work was done here in 1998 at the SCO offices in Murray Hill New Jersey SCO management was intent on selling UnixWare through OEM deals with hardware manufacturers aiming at the enterprise market and towards this end in 1996 they announced the Big E initiative that would standardize UnixWare as the operating system on these systems and that would attract independent software vendors to make their products available on such systems 160 Hardware vendors already supporting UnixWare 7 included IBM HP Compaq and Tandem despite some of them offering their own Unix flavors on their high end RISC systems 186 In particular SCO had deals with IBM to sell UnixWare on the IBM Netfinity system 187 In February 1998 SCO announced the creation of the Data Center Acceleration Program DCAP which sought to add features related to reliability availability and scalability to UnixWare 7 in order to make it fully suitable for high end Intel based systems deployed in data centers 188 The funding for DCAP came from Intel and from four hardware OEM providers of Intel based servers Compaq Data General ICL and Unisys 189 The features to be added to UnixWare 7 included six way clustering and support for 16 way ccNUMA servers 189 As one analyst for International Data Group said UnixWare is moving upmarket 190 The program was also intended to help SCO fund development of UnixWare for the Merced architecture and give the four hardware vendors access to the resulting 64 bit OEM UnixWare without requiring further porting to each vendor s specific hardware 191 A year later at the CeBIT show in March 1999 SCO announced the release of UnixWare 7 Data Center Edition as the product of the DCAP effort 190 In addition to the sponsoring companies IBM and Sequent both said they would offer the data center edition on their servers 190 In terms of high availability figures the data center edition promised 99 99 availability four nines at the time of release with 99 995 four and a half nines to arrive by 2000 192 Another avenue towards capturing space in the enterprise was work that SCO did in conjunction with Compaq and Tandem towards the 1998 release of UnixWare NonStop Clusters 193 The data center release came out at the same time as UnixWare 7 1 release which offers six different edition bundles in all 184 A review in InfoWorld said that UnixWare 7 is the sturdiest and most feature rich Unix ever ported to Intel processors and added that especially with the addition of the webtop interface the 7 1 release was equal in polish to Windows NT 184 UnixWare 7 1 started seeing some strong sales 187 Through several changes of corporate ownership UnixWare 7 would remain a supported product into the 2020s 194 Another multi company initiative that SCO led was the Uniform Driver Interface project UDI which sought to establish an OS neutral and platform neutral portable interface for writing device drivers 195 The UDI project had the backing of Intel HP IBM Compaq Sun and others as well as the involvement of independent hardware vendors such as Adaptec 196 UDI details were heavily discussed at the 1999 edition of SCO Forum 197 and UDI materialized in SCO operating systems with later UnixWare 7 and OpenServer 5 releases 198 Tarantella product edit Main article Tarantella Inc October 1997 saw the first release of a new product from the Client Integration Division 199 Tarantella is an application brokering platform that sits between back end applications running on various platforms and Java enabled web browser clients 200 An initial limitation was that it supported applications running on Unix but needed third party software in order to handle mainframe or Windows applications 200 One selling point of Tarantella is that users could begin working on an application on one client have to stop working for whatever reason and then resume working from that point on from another client 200 A review in InfoWorld viewed Tarantella was promising but needing more work 200 nbsp View out of the SCO Cambridge office 1999Later version 1 x releases support more application types such as AS 400 and IBM mainframe applications 199 More client types were added as well including native clients to remove the dependency on Java support The product also added scalability and security features to better support larger enterprises and secure application access over the Internet A rebranding to Tarantella Enterprise II took place in late 1999 201 This release added support for Windows applications via native support for Microsoft s Remote Desktop Protocol 199 At that point the primary competitor to Tarantella became the MetaFrame product from Citrix Systems 202 While Citrix was the dominant player in this space it did not yet support Unix applications whereas Tarantella does 203 199 Significant revenue from Tarantella did not happen during the 1990s as it had a long sales cycle due to lengthy customer evaluations 187 SCO then sought to market Tarantella as a platform for application service providers to use 202 and as a way that companies could host and outsource applications 203 As part of this SCO sought to use Tarantella as a way of promoting itself as a new dot com company as opposed to its twenty year history as an operating system provider 203 SCO were pioneers in the notion of a web desktop or webtop This was also central to the idea of how Tarantella presents applications to a user This was integrated with Tarantella to provide a UnixWare 7 webtop in 1999 which organizes access to UnixWare and its applications via any Java enabled web browser 204 To some industry reviewers the OS webtop was a compelling feature 184 Customers and financial state edit Between 1996 and 1997 SCO s share of the Unix systems sold rose from 36 percent to 40 percent 185 By 1998 the figure was over 40 percent 205 And in 1998 shipments of SCO Unix systems grew by 58 percent over 1997 a greater increase than for any other server oriented flavor of Unix 190 The Unix market as a whole was considered strong despite fears of the increasing power of Windows NT 185 And by 1998 SCO had 85 percent of the Unix on Intel market 191 At the end of the 1990s SCO Unix systems had around 15 000 value added resellers VARs and an infrastructure presence of some kind in 80 countries around the world 206 SCO also had a strong business in replicated sites meaning retail companies where there was a SCO system in each store of a chain such customers included fast food outlets such as McDonald s Pizza Hut and Taco Bell 207 127 186 pharmacy chains such as CVS Pharmacy and Walgreens 186 and other chains such as Kmart and Radio Shack 60 Other well known companies who were SCO customers included Northwest Airlines 60 as well as Goodyear Tire amp Rubber Nasdaq Inc and Lucent Technologies 207 SCO was named to PC Magazine s 100 Most Influential Companies list in both 1997 208 and 1998 209 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org SCO profit loss by year as a public company in millions of dollars 43 61 The company did not have good financial results during this time 210 By 1997 there were few independent operating system vendors left in the industry other than SCO 55 Being a software only company whose revenue was only around the 200 million mark left SCO with marginal resources to compete with Unixes from the big RISC vendors like Digital HP and Sun 191 Engineering costs were high 160 as UnixWare 7 and Tarantella each resulted from two years of research and development activity 210 During 1997 there were some reductions in staff and closing of regional offices 210 In April 1998 Doug Michels was named as president and CEO of the company with Alok Mohan becoming chairman of the board 211 Michels said that he never aimed to become CEO preferring to remain more technology focused but that he had always had a lot of visibility into the CEO role and was obviously very emotionally and intellectually attached to the company and its stakeholders 211 One of Michels first actions was to oversee a switch to electronic software licensing for SCO s products 212 The third quarter of fiscal 1997 had included a 23 million charge for reduction in channel inventory 210 and Michels said he was determined to eliminate issues related to the size of physical inventory 212 He stated that SCO believes electronic licensing and distribution of products will be a standard for the industry 212 The channel inventory was emptied by July 1998 and the new electronic licensing was in effect the following month for a new point release of OpenServer 5 the product that was still accounting for some 80 percent of SCO s Unix revenues 213 Monterey edit nbsp Project Monterey T shirt given to employees of the companies involvedDuring the mid to late 1990s many in the computer industry believed that Intel s under development 64 bit architecture known as IA 64 and code named Merced would dominate the marketplace once released 214 But the architecture was very different from IA 32 and migrating operating systems and tools to it was very expensive 215 SCO needed a well funded hardware company to ally with the earlier 3DA initiative with HP had failed 214 and discussions about SCO being compatible with the Bravo Unix from Compaq and its Digital Unix had not gotten far 216 When IBM proposed an alliance SCO jumped at the chance to further bolster its entry into the enterprise space 214 The core idea of Project Monterey was to take elements from IBM s AIX Sequent s DYNIX ptx and SCO s UnixWare to form a merged 64 bit Unix for Intel s Merced architecture 205 217 This merged OS was supposed to become available at the same time as Merced in mid 2000 218 Along the way there would be stages of earlier deliverables 218 IBM pledged as part of the deal to make UnixWare 7 its Unix of choice for high volume IA 32 systems and to devote considerable efforts towards selling UnixWare 7 through its sales and marketing mechanisms 217 This would be aided by IBM including its middleware and some AIX technology into 32 bit UnixWare and conversely some UnixWare technology would be incorporated into future versions of AIX 219 218 IBM would gain access to SCO s experience with Unix on Intel as well as access to SCO s reseller channel 205 Part of the motivation for Monterey was another attempt by Unix vendors to show a clear advantage for Unix in the high end enterprise space against Microsoft s latest NT offering now being branded as Windows 2000 and scheduled to be available for Merced as well 205 218 Towards that end Intel said they would create a multi million dollar fund for ISVs to develop for the 64 bit Monterey 218 220 InfoWorld stated that IBM had stunned the industry with the move 219 in part because IBM was playing catch up in the Merced space 220 nbsp Several engineers from SCO s New Jersey office about to enter the IBM Toronto Lab in February 1999 in order to discuss aspects of Project MontereyThe project was announced by the involved companies on October 26 1998 in New York 217 An IBM executive said IBM is totally committed to making this effort a success 220 One SCO executive said that Monterey was probably the biggest deal SCO has done 201 But not every industry observer was enthusiastic the story about the deal in Computer Reseller News began Just what the world needs another Unix 220 In any case the project proceeded with AIX becoming the dominant technology within it rather than UnixWare 221 By October 1999 a year after the announcement the work in progress Monterey was said to be up and operational on early silicon versions of Itanium as Merced was by then officially called and able to run both 32 bit UnixWare binaries and 64 bit natively built binaries on it 187 However as 2000 began things were changing at IBM as there was a corporate wide strategic initiative to get behind the open source Linux operating system 214 A few months later IBM released a major upgrade to AIX but instead of it being associated with Monterey it was called AIX 5L with the L indicating an affinity for Linux 214 It was clear to industry observers that IBM considered Monterey to be over with 222 IBM s decision to shelve Monterey left the SCO product line without a 64 bit Unix solution 207 Itanium was further delayed and when it did come out it failed to succeed in the marketplace so Project Monterey was a failure from multiple perspectives 214 Y2K surge and recede edit The open source software movement was something that SCO had to be cognizant of and for a number of years SCO Skunkware a frequently updated collection of open source packages built for SCO platforms had helped bridge the gap between the traditional and open source development worlds 223 Then in an attempt to deal with the growing popularity of Linux as a low cost operating system during 1999 SCO began offering consulting services for Linux 224 SCO also engaged in partnerships with and investments into various Linux companies 201 This included agreements to sell Linux distributions from Caldera Systems SuSE and TurboLinux 225 as well as a partnership to provide professional services to customers of TurboLinux server farms and an investment in the LinuxMall portal site 187 One motivation for some of these initiatives was an effort by SCO to enlarge its professional services operation as by 1999 such activity only comprised about 5 percent of SCO s total revenues 187 Finally a vice president for marketing was hired who had a Linux background 226 nbsp Unix on a PC lab racks in the Murray Hill New Jersey officeDuring 1998 and 1999 much of the computer industry including SCO was focused on dealing with the Y2K problem 40 SCO saw a surge in sales as customers bought new Y2K compliant products and upgrades to replace the vulnerable software they were running 105 As a consequence the company began reporting better financial results during 1999 and its stock began a slow upward climb starting from a prior low point of 23 8 226 To meet the demand SCO added more staff 105 In October 1999 the company announced record earnings for a quarter and a year and its highest yearly revenue mark at 224 million 224 The results broke a four year streak of SCO losing money 187 The company also had the best cash position in its history with some 62 million in that form or in short term investments 201 As a result its stock price rose to a new high of 1415 16 224 Michels expressed optimism saying the year was a turning point and the beginning of very strong ongoing business 187 The growth spurt was fake and the reality of it was we were stealing from our future After Y2K sales dropped like a rock Customers were done upgrading We had to cut staff The stock dropped Doug Michels in 2012 reflecting upon part of what led to the end for the Santa Cruz Operation 105 The stock s biggest surge happened in mid December 1999 when Steve Harmon an influential analyst covering technology companies went on CNBC and included SCO on his list of ten stock picks for 2000 201 The stock promptly jumped by 7 points 201 and in late December 1999 the stock reached an all time high of 357 8 227 SCO s value was seen in having a solid core business with earnings and revenue in having some kind of Linux play and in having a new technology Internet capitalizing product in Tarantella 226 201 An analyst for the GiGa Information Group agreed that SCO was a company to watch in 2000 201 But the Y2K based splurge would not last 227 In March and July 2000 SCO announced earnings shortfalls with SCO s Unix products selling slowly once Y2K anxiety was past 227 The increasing popularity of Linux solutions had resumed taking its toll as well 225 By July only seven months after its peak at over 35 the stock price had crashed to below 5 225 The company announced it was cutting costs as a result 227 and that it had hired investment bankers Chase H amp Q to explore strategic combinations with other companies 225 Fundamentally SCO was doing battle on one hand in a commercial software world increasingly dominated by Microsoft and on the other hand in a world where open source Linux was undermining commercial software itself 228 These two factors made constantly pleasing Wall Street investors with double digit growth figures an imposing task 229 In particular Linux posed an existential threat to SCO OpenServer s low end marketshare 230 as one analyst said Linux can give you the same value proposition as SCO a Unix on cheap hardware for less money 231 And despite all the efforts UnixWare had not been fully successful in competing in the high end market 231 and now Linux was threatening UnixWare s share of that as well 230 As a result by mid 2000 SCO s market position and the company itself was rapidly collapsing 228 232 Final history editAsset sale and change of name edit See also Tarantella Inc In March 2000 at the time of the first announced earnings shortfall SCO had reorganized into three divisions Server Software Professional Services and Tarantella 231 The split was intended to highlight Tarantella as a product independent of SCO Unix 231 and was seen by industry analysts as a prelude to some or all of the divisions being sold 232 As one International Data Corporation analyst said SCO has to do something with their business model because their business is eroding 225 nbsp End of an era Caldera Systems addresses the SCO community at Forum 2000 On August 2 2000 following several months of negotiations SCO announced that it would sell its Server Software and Services Divisions including UnixWare to the Linux company Caldera Systems 233 234 The deal was complex involving cash stock and loans and difficult to evaluate monetarily but based on the price of Caldera Systems stock at the time it was worth around 110 114 million 235 234 230 The idea of the purchase from Caldera Systems perspective is that it would gain access to SCO s large VAR channel the value of such channels was well known to former Novell chief Ray Noorda whose Canopy Group was funding Caldera Systems 225 The announcement that SCO was selling its Unix assets to a Linux distribution company represented in the view of Eric Raymond the completion of the move from the commercial Unix industry to the open source movement 20 From Doug Michels later perspective the problem with Linux was not that it was open source and free itself but rather that in August 1999 during the dot com boom the Linux company Red Hat had been able to get 400 million during their IPO and was not expected to make a profit anytime soon while SCO was an established public company closely watched by the stock market that was expected to make a profit and had only around 50 million in cash 19 By this time the SCO stock price was down around 21 2 228 Thus when the chance came to merge with Caldera Systems which was in a generally similar position as Red Hat although with less cash SCO took it 19 SCO was much the bigger company with 900 employees at that point to Caldera Systems 120 235 Throughout the year there had been layoffs from SCO 228 including the shutting down of the Watford development office 69 In addition a number of longtime SCO employees chose to leave the company 228 An especially large layoff took place in September 2000 soon after the Caldera Systems announcement when 190 employees were let go comprising 19 percent of the company s workforce 232 This layoff included 40 employees in Santa Cruz itself 228 The SCO acquisition was originally scheduled to close in October 2000 234 but got delayed due to concerns from the Securities and Exchange Commission regarding the details of the merger 236 However the two companies support organizations did get combined during this time 236 In addition there was confusion among the SCO customer base about the fate of OpenServer 237 So in February 2001 the deal was renegotiated to include OpenServer in what was sold to Caldera Systems although a percentage of OpenServer revenue would still go back to SCO The monetary terms of the deal were adjusted as well with Caldera Systems paying SCO more cash than in the original agreement 237 Finally on May 7 2001 SCO completed the sale of its Server Software and Services Divisions as well as UnixWare and OpenServer technologies to Caldera Systems 206 At that time Caldera Systems changed its name to Caldera International 238 and the remaining part of SCO the Tarantella Division changed its name to Tarantella Inc 239 Aftermath edit The sale of the company s Unix assets and renaming of what was left marked the end of an era for not just SCO but the town of Santa Cruz as well 228 The staff going to Caldera moved into the 400 Encincal building while the newly named Tarantella occupied the 425 Encinal structure 228 There were ironies in SCO s demise being largely from the effects of Linux since SCO had been a pioneer of the open systems movement As one writer stated In some ways SCO was Linux before Linux popularizing Unix on low cost Intel machines 51 In August 2002 Caldera International renamed itself The SCO Group since the SCO Unix products were still their greatest source of revenue due to the large installed base they had That entity soon started the SCO Linux controversies Those familiar with the Santa Cruz Operation including those who worked there and those who wrote about it became protective of that company s reputation especially given the possible name confusion regarding the role The SCO Group played in the attacks on Linux 40 51 77 As former Santa Cruz Operation employee wrote later about The SCO Group I ll spare you the sordid legal details but by then it was no longer our SCO 40 Company culture editSanta Cruz atmosphere edit The Santa Cruz Operation thoroughly reflected the ethos of the community for which it was named SCO probably could have been a better run company My memory is that the stock analysts were fairly definite on that point but it wouldn t have been nearly so much fun Industry writer David Coursey in 2004 51 From its inception and co founding by UC Santa Cruz graduate Doug Michels the company drew upon the readily available technical talent who chose to remain in the central California coastal town of Santa Cruz after graduating But the town and university affected the company as well SCO was at the center of the Santa Cruz tech scene with many employees moving from it to other tech companies or vice versa 40 53 Some of the feel of the SCO offices was carried forward in coworking facilities later set up in Santa Cruz by two former SCO employees 240 New products were promoted with mock film posters 51 The Vice President of Marketing and Communications was through much of the 1980s and early 1990s Bruce Steinberg who was an artist and musician in the San Francisco area music scene 241 whose credits included having designed the flying toasters cover of the Jefferson Airplane s 1973 live album Thirty Seconds Over Winterland 51 nbsp End of day meetings were held on these rooftops here seen in 1999 from the hills behind them center right is 425 Encinal on the left mostly obscured is 400 Encinal The Santa Cruz Operation name itself brought comments one Canadian industry writer called it One of the coolest company names I ever came across since entering this business 242 From its earliest days through to its last ones The Santa Cruz Operation was known for reflecting the casual ambience of its namesake town 228 Dress was casual to the point where some staffers went barefoot 17 There was beer in the office end of day meetings held on Encincal Street roofs and an outdoor hot tub at the Mission Street office dating from the facility s previous existence as a holistic health clinic that was used during the day or for late night after work parties 105 53 One former employee said years later of her experience there It was a family We played hard but we also worked hard I don t think I ve worked anywhere since that s had that kind of feel 105 The SCO reputation was exemplified by an oft related story of a time where the company had to put out a rule that clothing must be worn during office hours caused by an instance where someone walking in from the hot tub had not done so and a potential corporate partner had been paying a visit 77 53 Over 500 former Santa Cruz Operation employees held a reunion at the Cocoanut Grove venue in Santa Cruz in 2012 105 SCO Forum edit Main article SCO Forum Beginning in 1987 SCO hosted an annual Summer conference for the international Unix community Called SCO Forum it was held on the University of California Santa Cruz s scenic redwood forested campus overlooking Monterey Bay drew some 2000 3000 attendees and lasted for much of a week 243 80 244 Featured speakers over the years included Douglas Adams 245 Scott Adams Dave Barry 246 Clifford Stoll John Perry Barlow Linus Torvalds Andy Grove Intel Michael Swavely Compaq Steve Ballmer Microsoft and Scott McNealy Sun Microsystems 247 Musical entertainment included concerts by Jefferson Starship Tower of Power Roger McGuinn Jan amp Dean The Kingsmen The Surfaris and Deth Specula 248 Due to its useful content and its relaxed fun atmosphere SCO Forum became known as one of the best such conferences to go to in the industry and was viewed fondly by those who attended 249 250 51 It was the largest tech event in the Santa Cruz area and made a multi million dollar impact on the local economy 251 Palookaville webcasts edit Following the first live Internet concert in 1994 SCO continued in that tradition by sponsoring and producing a series of live Internet webcasts from the popular Santa Cruz night club Palookaville These webcasts demonstrated the use of UnixWare 7 as a real time audio and video webcasting server utilizing RealAudio and RealVideo technologies from RealNetworks 252 Trapping a hacker edit SCO was a target of one of the most publicized security hackers of the 1980s and 1990s Kevin Mitnick who broke into the company s systems in 1987 253 SCO s staff detected his intrusions and engaged in exchanges with him that allowed them to track his activities 254 After about a week of this it appeared that the intruder was trying to modify or copy Xenix code 255 Authorities having been notified the phone line Mitnick was using for the intrusions was discovered and he was arrested 255 He reached a deal to plead to a misdemeanor for which he did no jail time 253 but it was his first conviction as an adult 255 SCO officials agreed not to sue him if he would explain his hacking techniques to them 254 But when a SCO staffer traveled to meet him he was uncommunicative 254 255 In any case Mitnick soon continued his intruder activities against other companies systems 253 SCO Follies edit From 1985 to 2001 the company hosted a Winter Solstice party at the Cocoanut Grove in Santa Cruz featuring a live musical show known as The SCO Follies This was a fully scripted and produced satire skewering SCO management and the high tech industry It featured live action musical numbers and videos 256 On September 22 2012 the SCO Alumni Association hosted the SCOGala Reunion party at the Cocoanut Grove which included the first SCO Follies since 2001 Some 500 former employees friends and family attended the event Year Title Description1985 Star Trek Scripts in hand early SCO employees go where no company has gone before 1986 unknown 1987 unknown 1988 Cheers Sometimes you want to go where no one knows your login name 1989 Larry Wants an Ad Exasperated with Bruce Steinberg s hairbrained ideas Larry Michels asks employees to submit concepts for a new ad campaign 1990 Late Night with Doug Michels SCO licenses the Late Night format from GE with Doug as host Guests include the XENIX Colonel Michael J Foxplus promoting Backup to the Future II SCO s own Princess of Purple and direct from the mail room Elvis 1991 KODT SCO launches a cable television channel that requires a telethon to raise funds for the equally cash strapped organization operating under the banner of almost public television 1992 Archaeological Dig The year is 2100 and the world has only recently recovered from a catastrophic era known as The Corporate Wars Drs Dave Loman and Jane Greenleaf are recovering artifacts from the original SCO site in New Santa Cruz The archaeologists are working under the supervision of an overbearing AI known as the NED 9 0 1 Project Management System and Michelle Michels descendant of the founders of SCO With a little hacking a kinder wackier NED makes for a much less stressful work environment 1993 How to Succeed in the Software Business Job applicant Grace Hopper joins the company via social engineering With the help of a book on the software business Grace hopscotches across the SCO org chart with stints in Manufacturing Support Engineering Sales and Marketing Meanwhile VP and co founder Doug Michels is rescued from a car crash and imprisoned by a deranged ex SCO employee named Annie Wilkes Grace is ultimately made CEO but turns it down for a better job This show includes the infamous Die Hard video by late Follies action director Peter Israel Rosencrantz In the current climate it s hard to picture a CEO giving permission for employees to parade through the building carrying automatic weapons let alone appearing in the video himself But Swedish born Lars Turndal sat for an hour with guns trained on him by some wacky Americans as if he d been doing it all his life 1994 The Phantom of the Operation Software engineer Eric T Claudin runs afoul of evil VP Edwin Vincent Leach who is bent on SCO s destruction Disfigured in a hot tub accident arranged by Leach Eric becomes the Phantom a dark figure obsessed with saving the firm Once again then CEO Lars Turndal proved he was a real sport and consented to appear in his second and last video one that roasted the executive team for trying to censor the Usenet feed Brian Moffet produced the stained glass style panorama that opens the show 1995 FCS Can Wait For the uninitiated FCS is First Customer Ship the magic goal of the product development cycle Based on the films Here Comes Mr Jordan and Heaven Can Wait Engineering manager Jo Pendleton is hurled into the great void ahead of schedule Bodies must be swapped and Heaven amp Earth must be moved so that Jo can complete her project of a lifetime SCO DoomBugger 1996 UNIX Won t Die After a series of high profile incidents involving glitches in the UNIX operating system namely Apollo 13 Three Mile Island and the Exxon Valdez James Bond tracks the SPECTRE of his nemesis Ernst Stavro Blofeld into the hallways of SCO Along for the ride is the mysterious Tilly Masterson sister of the woman who was suffocated in paint by the nefarious Goldfinger Software engineer Fox Mulder and Dana Sculley a schmuck from Legal have stumbled onto the UNIX plot and are suspicious of Bond s presence This show was the first to include digital compositing a couple of laser beams and explosions These early steps were taken on a Miro DC20 video card and Adobe Premiere purchased with pooled funds Bill Welch created these effects and Mike Almond provided the opening Star Wars animation using Caligari TrueSpace Thereafter nearly all the effects for Follies were created digitally 1997 Taming of the CEO A Shakespearean romp where Viola Murch a top female director who despairs of ever becoming a VP decides to disguise herself as a man She learns that the top floor is a far stranger place than she imagined This show included a mock preview for a show called Sliders about parallel SCO universes This marked the full use of digital effects and compositing Mike Almond was responsible for creating such 3D items as a phalanx of Imperial Stormtroopers and a streaking Millennium Falcon 1998 A Solstice Carol The story of Ezekiel Kludge a crusty longtime SCO manager who re discovers the true meaning of SCO 1999 The Wizard of OCS IBM engineering manager Dorothy Gale is transported into the wacky world of OCS where she meets a Marketeer who wants to lose his brain A Salesman who wants to get rid of his heart and an Engineer who wants to get rid of his life 2000 Willy Wonka and the Software Factory Support specialist Charlotte Bucket dreams of visiting SCO s Software Factory and Willy Wonka the Chief Geek who no one has seen for years It s an adventure populated with Corpa Lorpas Waffling Precompensators Paleoatavistic Patch Pellucidators and Everlasting Spamstoppers Not to mention Fizzy Linux stocks And some arrogant selfish and greedy adult children get their comeuppance as well 2001 Fiddler on the 425 Roof The final SCO Follies occurred shortly after Caldera Systems purchased the Santa Cruz Operation Thus the show s theme is change with Caldera Systems as the Cossacks The show opens with the Dawn of Spam sequence adapted from Stanley Kubrick s classic odyssey The mood of the Linux Company finale was subsequently overturned when the radically downsized later named SCO Group turned against Linux 2012 Raiders of the Lost Archive When two members of a secret SCO organization are murdered the SCOllegium assigns a team of ex SCOites to find out who is responsible Alliances edit nbsp The SCO Partner Conference was a yearly conference held for Santa Cruz Operation partners in the United Kingdom and sometimes elsewhere The 2000 edition took place at a hotel in Stratford upon Avon with the SCO flag flying in front of it SCO was a primary partner in several industry alliances intended to promote SCO operating system technology as a de facto standard for emerging hardware platforms The most notable of these were The ACE Consortium Founded by Compaq Microsoft MIPS Computer Systems Silicon Graphics Digital Equipment Corporation and SCO in 1991 to drive the next generation of PCs powered by the Advanced RISC Computing Specification ARC 3DA Formed by SCO and Hewlett Packard in 1995 to define the standard Unix for IA 32 and later IA 64 systems Uniform Driver Interface Led by SCO and with work starting in 1997 the UDI project sought to establish an OS neutral and platform neutral portable interface for writing device drivers The UDI project had the backing of Intel HP IBM Compaq Sun and others Project Monterey Formed by SCO IBM Sequent and Intel in 1998 to define the standard UNIX for IA 64 systems Also intended to merge some of the proprietary Unix products afloat at the time 20 None of these alliances were ultimately successful SCO was also part of 1993 s COSE initiative a more successful and broadly supported initiative to create an open and unified UNIX standard SCO was a founding member of 86open 1997 1999 hosting the first meeting of the Unix on Intel standards effort See also editHistory of Unix Timeline of operating systems Xinuos for the current owners of the SCO related Unix productsReferences edit a b Novell Completes Sale of UnixWare Business to The Santa Cruz Operation Press release Novell December 6 1995 Trademark Electronic Search System TESS United States Patent and Trademark Office July 16 2007 Archived from the original on December 14 2012 Retrieved May 3 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Pate Steve D 1996 UNIX Internals A Practical Approach New York Addison Wesley Professional pp 9 11 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Barrier Michael March 1992 How a California software firm is trying to open up the personal computer s future Nation s Business pp 14ff via Gale General OneFile a b c d Pittman Jennifer November 13 1999 Stroke Claims SCO s Founder Santa Cruz Sentinel pp A1 A14 via Newspapers com a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Fisher Lawrence M January 4 1991 Small Software Maker Is Taking Giant Steps The New York Times pp D1 D4 Jaques Cattell Press ed 1979 Industrial Research Laboratories of the United States 10th ed National Research Council p 552 ISBN 9780835211352 a b c d e f g h i j Shender Steve February 16 1989 SCO local software firm hooks up with Microsoft Santa Cruz Sentinel pp A1 A12 via Newspapers com Remembrances Notice Lawrence Michels Santa Cruz Sentinel November 12 1999 p A 10 a b c d e Falk Bennett Eisenhart Mary February 1987 The Santa Cruz Operation Taking Care Of Business With XENIX MicroTimes pp 46 54 At p 48 uncertain Telephone Engineer amp Management 1977 p 61 issue uncertain Oates Sarah October 25 1989 Company thriving after switch in owners The Orlando Sentinel pp F 1 F 2 Editor s Notes Embedded Muse The Ganssle Group April 7 2008 Bezroukov Nikolai July 28 2019 XENIX Microsoft Short lived Love Affair with Unix Softpanorama Retrieved May 27 2021 a b c d e f g h Gaura Maria February 7 1988 Firm has a megabyte of future Santa Cruz Sentinel p D1 via Newspapers com See for instance Doug Michels Linked In page which gives January 1979 as his start date with SCO a b c d e Product of intelligence up for sale Santa Cruz Sentinel September 18 1983 p 54 via Newspapers com a b Schultz Brad February 23 1981 AT amp T s C Called Flexible Language Computerworld p 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Isenberg Sara April 21 2016 Watch A look back conversation with Doug Michels co founder of SCO Santa Cruz Tech Beat Interview itself published by BayLive Media conducted by Jean Baptiste Su and is almost certainly from August 2006 at SCO Forum in Las Vegas a b c d Raymond Eric S 2003 The Art of UNIX Programming Addison Wesley Professional pp 35 36 43 ISBN 978 0 13 142901 7 a b c d e f Burk Robin Horvath David B eds 1997 UNIX Unleashed System Administrator s Edition Indianapolis Sams Publishing pp 10 12 653 a b c d Linthicum David S Vaughan Nichols Stephen J June 15 1993 Unix on Intel The Beast Turns Beauty PC Magazine pp 219 263 At pp 220 221 240 250 252 Elwell James F 1982 An approach to the definition and implementation of a software development environment Proceedings of the June 7 10 1982 national computer conference AFIPS 82 Association for Computing Machinery pp 309 318 doi 10 1145 1500774 1500812 ISBN 0 88283 035 X At p 315 Introducing the TYMSHARE DYNASTY DYNIX Family EDUCOM Bulletin Winter 1981 p 32 Advertisement Hare John Bruno Thomas Dean 1984 Porting Xenix to the Unmapped 8086 Proceedings of the USENIX Winter Conference Washington D C USENIX Association Abstract may be seen at in this December 1983 isssue of login page 26 a b c Markoff John December 26 1983 Can Unix ever fit personal computers InfoWorld pp 40 42 ISSN 0199 6649 Issue joint dated to January 2 1984 a b c d e SCO obtains distribution rights for XENIX Santa Cruz Sentinel February 2 1984 p 10 Computer Festival 84 supplement via Newspapers com Is There Any Unix Software InfoWorld April 15 1985 pp 17 18 IEEE Membership Directory Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 1989 p 1484 a b Xenix System V debuts for IBM micros Computerworld October 7 1985 p 54 Salus Peter H December 2003 Nearly 20 Years ago in Usenix PDF login p 68 Archived from the original PDF on August 26 2004 Wojahn Ellen April 1990 Fathers and Sons Inc Santa Cruz Operation Ltd to Offer Source for Xenix InfoWorld December 8 1986 p 33 a b Around the county Software firm announces changes Santa Cruz Sentinel December 7 1986 p D 1 via Newspapers com This is InfoWorld November 9 1987 p 38 Advertisement Santa Cruz Operation Replaces 8086 Operating System with Personal Xenix Computergram International Computer Business Review April 2 1989 a b c d e f g h i j Scharf Jeffrey R May 23 1993 SCO may go public this week Santa Cruz Sentinel p D 9 via Newspapers com Leibovitch Evan March 1997 The Death of Xenix Linux Journal Accounting Santa Cruz Sentinel February 22 1987 p C 1 via Newspapers com Advertisement a b c d e f g Isenberg Sara April 23 2015 Don t let anyone tell you tech is new in Santa Cruz Santa Cruz Tech Beat Open House Santa Cruz Sentinel April 21 1991 p B 12 via Newspapers com Advertisement a b MOTIF Frequently Asked Questions comp windows x motif November 16 1996 Retrieved May 15 2021 See entry for IXI Premier Motif a b c Form 10 K The Santa Cruz Operation Inc for the Fiscal Year Ended September 30 1996 Washington D C U S Securities and Exchange Commission December 24 1996 a b c d e f Rosen Kenneth H Rosinski Richard H Farber James M Host Douglas A 1996 UNIX System V Release 4 An Introduction Second ed Berkeley California Osborne McGraw Hill pp 12 14 15 19 22 See also 2006 printing of Second Edition pp 25 28 a b Marshall Martin June 18 1990 SCO Unix 3 2 Update Is Ready to Ship in July InfoWorld p 45 Flynn Laurie April 24 1995 The Executive Computer The New York Times p D4 a b c d Vaughan Nichols Steven J May 22 2003 Understanding the Microsoft SCO connection Linux com Retrieved April 3 2021 Microsoft Stake in Unix Maker The New York Times February 16 1989 p D5 a b c Mace Scott February 20 1989 Microsoft Says It Will Purchase Portion of SCO InfoWorld p 5 a b c d e f g Lasnier Guy December 26 1993 SCO s year of living differently Santa Cruz Sentinel p C 1 via Newspapers com a b c d e f g Coursey David June 15 2004 SCO When Bad Things Happen to Good Brands eWeek Watt Peggy April 2 1984 Microsoft to release two versions of MS DOS InfoWorld p 13 a b c d Grusauskas Maria September 20 2012 Software Company Alumni Remember the Hot Tub Parties of Their Heyday Patch Santa Cruz a b c d e f g h i j Button Kate November 24 1994 Stuck in the middle Computer Weekly pp 48ff via Gale General OneFile a b c Clark Don November 24 1997 Microsoft Agrees to Free Software Rival from Paying Royalties on Unix System The Wall Street Journal p B10 ProQuest 398649518 Microsoft Alters Deal to End EU Dispute Los Angeles Times Bloomberg News November 25 1997 Scott Mace August 27 1990 Binary Unix 386 Standard to Be Revised InfoWorld Marshall Martin August 29 1988 AT amp T s Unix Xenix Merged Product Ready for Delivery InfoWorld p 25 Zaballos Zee June 30 1989 SCO UNIX System V 386 Release 3 2 Ships Press release Business Wire ProQuest 447098614 via ProQuest a b c d e f g h i j k l m Silicon Valley Success Story Finds It Hard To Turn A Profit The Baltimore Sun Knight Ridder News Service November 25 1991 p 10 Maryland Business Weekly supplement a b Form 10 K The Santa Cruz Operation Inc for the Fiscal Year Ended September 30 2000 Washington D C U S Securities and Exchange Commission December 18 2000 a b Santa Cruz Operation s Open Desktop unit is ready to ship Computergram International February 9 1990 via Gale General OneFile a b Parker Rachel March 6 1989 SCO Announces Implementation of OSF s Motif InfoWorld p 8 a b Zachmann William F April 28 1992 32 Bit GUI Alternatives No Contest PC Magazine p 192 IXI Limited s X desktop to be included in SCO open desktop Press release PR Newswire June 21 1989 via Gale General OneFile Santa Cruz Signs With Locus for MS DOS X Window Software Computergram International January 2 1989 Santa Cruz Operation Goes to Retix for Open Systems Interconnection Software Computergram International August 29 1989 Locus Wins Santa Cruz Agreement Computergram International August 22 1991 a b Form 10 K For the fiscal year ended October 31 2002 Caldera International Inc Securities and Exchange Commission January 27 2003 Not the Toronto Operations Computerworld May 14 1990 Retrieved September 24 2016 Dvorak John April 18 1983 Inside Track Computerworld Retrieved September 24 2016 News Wire Santa Cruz Operation to Buy HCR Corp InfoWorld May 14 1990 p 40 Seirup Brian May 31 1994 SCO Open Desktop PC Magazine pp 232 234 SCO UNIX System V 386 Development System binary types amp conversions SCO TA 100227 Computer Business Consultants January 29 1990 Retrieved May 17 2021 Availability of Ada and C Compilers Tools Education and Training PDF Alexandria Virginia Institute for Defense Analysis July 1991 p C 10 Archived PDF from the original on March 27 2020 Technical Advisory Can OpenServer 5 access NetWare 4 1 servers as they support NDS and we do not Santa Cruz Operation January 3 1996 a b c d Stross Charles June 19 2009 How I got here in the end part five things can only get better antipope org Stross Charles May 18 2013 Crib Sheet The Atrocity Archive s antipope org Keefe Patricia July 9 1990 Multiprocessor extension fans Compaq fires Computerworld p 70 a b c d e f g h i Lasnier Guy August 19 1992 SCO pointing toward public stock offering Santa Cruz Sentinel pp A1 A8 via Newspapers com See also 2 500 attend local conference side article same by line same pagess a b Stone Paula S June 6 1988 Tandy Plans Marketing Push for Xenix Products p 32 Versions of SCO Portfolio supported on SCO operating systems SCO TA 102998 Computer Business Consultants June 2 1993 Retrieved May 22 2021 a b Santa Cruz Operation Replaces 8086 Operating System with Personal Xenix Computergram International April 2 1989 a b c Go Ahead Make Your Day Computerworld August 7 1989 p 36 Advertisement note also copyright notices at bottom Mace Scott July 3 1989 DOS SQL Engine for C Announced InfoWorld p 14 Watt Peggy February 8 1988 SCO to Merge Xenix System V Unify s 4GL Development Tools InfoWorld p 17 a b Needleman Raphael April 24 1989 The Other Side A Unix Vendor Looks at the PC LAN Market InfoWorld p S4 Mace Scott November 14 1988 SCO to Debut Security Control for SCO Unix InfoWorld p 49 a b c Marshall Martin January 8 1990 SCO Begins Shipping Microsoft Word 5 0 for Unix and Xenix InfoWorld p 6 a b Morton Janet L August 7 1990 The Santa Cruz Operation Ships Microsoft Word 5 0 for AT amp T 3B2 and 6386 Computers Running UNIX Systems Press release Business Wire ProQuest 447072169 via ProQuest a b c Microsoft Word SCO announces Word for Unix Systems Version 5 1 EDGE Work Group Computing Report March 11 1991 p 33 via Gale General OneFile Industry News Familiar Software Migrates to Unix Computing News University of Michigan Computing Center 1988 p 13 Markoff John July 3 1990 Lotus Sues 2 On Copyright Violation The New York Times p D1 Company News Lotus Settles Suit With Santa Cruz The New York Times Reuters June 18 1991 p D4 Ould Andrew June 24 1991 Win over SCO strengthens Lotus hand in Borland suit PC Week pp 163ff via Gale General OneFile Microsoft Word for SCO UNIX terminates with a Signal 11 received error when you try to save a document SCO TA 110788 Computer Business Consultants January 26 2000 Retrieved May 20 2021 a b c d e Markoff John April 8 1991 New Computer Alliance Forms The New York Times a b Orlowski Andrew August 20 2013 Windows NT Remember Microsoft s almost perfect 20 year old The Register Santa Cruz Operation Takes Over DEC s Unix Development Computergram International April 21 1991 Reorg SC forms product line business units to address key open systems market SCO key execs amp org structure EDGE Work Group Computing Report June 10 1991 p 2 via Gale General OneFile Lewis Peter H July 7 1991 The Executive Computer Can You See the Standards Through the Fog The New York Times p 6 Section 3 a b ACE Unix Delay May Clear the Way for Microsoft on Intel Computergram International November 24 1991 Hooper Laurence December 4 1991 Talks by Groupe Bull may Lead it to Quit ACE The Wall Street Journal ProQuest 398294152 via ProQuest a b Corcoran Cate May 4 1992 SCO Drops Open Desktop for MIPS InfoWorld p 8 a b c d e f g McCord Shanna September 22 2012 SCO spirit still going strong decade after tech company closed doors Santa Cruz Sentinel Updated September 11 2018 Goldberg Cheryl October 1992 New SCO rivals Software Magazine p 36 via Gale Academic OneFile a b c Cookes Thom December 6 1994 Serving in the battle of the billy carts The Age Melbourne p 32 via Newspapers com Bozman Jean S February 28 1994 SCO to reinforce its Unix system Computerworld pp 47 57 a b c Mendoza Martha December 16 1992 Sexual harassment suit stuns the local business community Santa Cruz Sentinel pp A1 A4 via Newspapers com See also Sexual harassment cases rise process often slow sidebar by same reporter p A 4 a b c d SCO chief accused of harassment Santa Cruz Sentinel December 8 1992 pp A 1 A 14 via Newspapers com a b Rogers Paul December 5 1992 Software Firm Founder Accused of Harassment San Jose Mercury News p 11B a b Rogers Paul December 16 1992 Another Worker Targets Michels San Jose Mercury News p 1B a b Kelly Joseph M Watt Bob 1996 Damages in Sex Harassment Cases A Comparative Study of American Canadian and British Law NYLS Journal of International and Comparative Law 16 1 79 134 At pp 92 94 95 a b c d Rogers Paul December 6 1992 Sexual harassment alleged The Fresno Bee Knight Ridder Newspapers p A5 via Newspapers com a b Foley Jack December 17 1992 Computer Firm to Study Allegations of Sexual Harassment San Jose Mercury News pp 1B 4B Schmitz Tom December 22 1992 Embroiled Software Boss Resigns San Jose Mercury News p 1A a b c d e f Lasnier Guy January 22 1993 New chief executive chairman at SCO Santa Cruz Sentinel p C 2 via Newspapers com Rogers Paul April 3 1993 Former SCO Boss Settles Silently San Jose Mercury News p 1A Rogers Paul April 19 1993 Sex Probe Ends San Jose Mercury News p 1B Santa Cruz Operation under fire for golden handshake to Michels Computergram International May 20 1993 via Gale General OneFile a b c Qi Hongmin May 28 1993 SCO stock hits the market Santa Cruz Sentinel pp A 1 A 8 via Newspapers com Jon Tarzia August 20 1997 Compaq and SCO Announce Strategic Alliance for the Enterprise Newsgroup comp unix sco announce Usenet 3 0 32 19970819215648 006d4068 venus sco com Retrieved October 9 2008 a b Lanier Guy August 12 1993 Different SCO approaches annual forum Santa Cruz Sentinel p B 6 via Newspapers com Perez Steve December 8 1994 Santa Cruz Operation names 2 new leaders Santa Cruz Operation p B 4 via Newspapers com Business Ordering over the Internet Chicago Tribune August 22 1994 p 3 Evening Update via Newspapers com Swaine Michael December 1994 Programming Paradigms The Pizza Clerk the Bookmaker and the UPS Truck Dr Dobb s Journal a b c sco and Pizza Hut Announce Pilot Program for Pizza Delivery on the Internet Press release Pizza Hut and The Santa Cruz Operation August 22 1994 Archived from the original on June 9 2012 Retrieved March 30 2008 SCO Provides Real World On Ramp Via NCSA Mosaic Press release HPC Wire March 11 1994 Retrieved March 30 2008 permanent dead link Strauss Neil November 22 1994 Rolling Stones Live on Internet Both a Big Deal and a Little Deal The New York Times p C15 Hafner Katie The MBone Can t You Hear It Knocking Newsweek December 5 1994 Malcolm McCameron August 23 1994 S F Bay Area Band Deth Specula Rocks the Internet with Live Computer Network Broadcast Deth Specula Retrieved March 30 2008 Jon R Luini August 23 1994 MediaCast Company Information MediaCast Retrieved March 30 2008 Deth Specula Live at the SCO Forum Internet Underground Music Archive August 23 1994 Archived from the original on February 2 1999 a b c Perez Steve May 9 1995 SCO to unveil new software product today Santa Cruz Sentinel p B 4 via Newspapers com a b c d e Shoesmith John May 24 1995 SCO Lays on the Glitz for its New 32 Bit OS Computing Canada pp 1 4 ProQuest 225014967 via ProQuest a b c Linthicum David S October 24 1995 Network Operating Systems SCO OpenServer Release 5 PC Magazine pp 223 228 a b c Pontin Jason May 8 1995 SCO set to counter Windows NT growth with Everest upgrade InfoWorld p 18 via Gale General OneFile Patrizio Andy May 15 1995 Testers wowed after scaling Everest SCO s OpenServer offers improved performance reliability PC Week p 13 via Gale General OneFile lt accessed April 13 2021 gt a b c Patrizio Andy May 8 1995 SCO s Everest Open Server mixes the old and the new PC Week p 8 via Gale General OneFile a b Schilling Jonathan L February 2003 The simplest heuristics may be the best in Java JIT compilers ACM SIGPLAN Notices 38 2 36 46 doi 10 1145 772970 772975 S2CID 15117148 a b Santa Cruz Chorus Work Codenamed MK2 Due 1997 Computergram International October 11 1995 via Gale General OneFile Pallatto John October 5 1992 Real time version of SCO Unix on tap PC Week pp 57ff via Gale General OneFile Foley Mary Jo December 6 1993 SCO Chorus prep microkernel Unix for real time apps PC Week pp 65ff via Gale General OneFile Watt Peggy August 28 1995 SCO French Firm Team to Call on Telecom Market Network World p 34 ProQuest 215937731 via ProQuest Santa Cruz and Chorus Finally Come Together Expect Chorus Fusion Merger with OpenServer Computergram International September 8 1995 via Gale General OneFile a b Wirbel Loring October 9 1995 Chorus SCO Harmonize on Upgraded Microkernels Electronic Engineering Times p 16 ProQuest 208135058 via ProQuest Hewlett 3DA Project Could Learn From Our Microkernel Work Says Santa Cruz Partner Chorus Computergram International March 6 1996 via Gale General OneFile Chorus Leaves Unix Behind Refocuses on Java and CORBA Computergram International March 4 1997 via Gale General OneFile Silence From Sun As It Refuses to Sing About Its Java Plans for French Chorus Computergram International September 12 1997 via Gale General OneFile SCO OpenServer 5 Definitive 2018 Xinuos Retrieved April 11 2021 a b Briefs SCO names CEO Computerworld June 26 1995 p 52 Pelline Jeff July 11 1995 Santa Cruz Operation Stock Plummets 25 San Francisco Chronicle ProQuest 303368077 via ProQuest SCO Information February 26 1993 SCO Acquires IXI Ltd Newsgroup biz sco announce Usenet 9302260824 aa14833 mascot sco COM Retrieved February 4 2009 Watt Peggy December 19 1994 SCO gains Windows edge via Visionware Network World pp 4 58 a b c d e Binns Roger August 14 2013 A history of VisionFS rogerbinns com Retrieved January 24 2020 Watt Peggy June 12 1995 X Window server vendors add Win95 support Network World pp 29 30 Patrizio Andy February 6 1995 Visionware tools help SCO build client server strategy PC Week p 21 via Gale General OneFile SCO Offers Windows to Unix Tools on Single CD Computergram International May 7 1997 a b SCO Vision2K Software Availability The Santa Cruz Operation Retrieved May 15 2021 a b c Patience Nick August 30 1996 Santa Cruz Operation Chief Mohan Explains How He Will End Days of Underachivement Computergram International via Gale General OneFile Pajari George November 1999 SCO Forum 1999 CJ Online speaks with Jiro Monden director of Nihon SCO Computing Japan Strom David November 5 2003 Novell Buys Unix Again CRN a b c d e Foley John June 6 2003 SCO Novell Deal Was Confusing From The Start Information Week a b c d UnixWare survives through sale licensing deal Network World September 25 1995 p 134 a b c Unix Unity Foundering InformationWeek December 1995 a b Future Unix The Devil s In The Details Information Week November 1995 HP Novell and SCO To Deliver High Volume UNIX OS With Advanced Network And Enterprise Services Press release Novell SCO Hewlett Packard September 20 1995 Archived from the original on January 23 2007 a b New Unix is no two bit act CNET January 8 1997 a b Hewlett Santa Cruz Send 3DA Unix Application Programming Interface Specification to OEM Customers to Review Computergram International August 23 1996 via Gale General OneFile a b As NT Rolls In Unixes Scrap It Out For Honors Computergram International August 10 1997 SCO Admits Past Mistakes Seeks Glory in Merced Computergram International March 16 1998 via Gale General OneFile Harvey Tom March 30 2010 Decision in SCO Novell case ripples beyond Utah The Salt Lake Tribune a b c SCO readies merged OS CNET November 11 1997 a b c Schilling Jonathan L August 1998 Optimizing away C exception handling ACM SIGPLAN Notices 33 8 40 47 doi 10 1145 286385 286390 S2CID 1522664 a b SCO Unveils Targeted Release Strategy for UnixWare 7 Press release HPCwire November 14 1997 Ronald Michael Baecker Yumpu September 1 2011 p 3 a b c d SCO Prepares the Way for a Smooth Change from OpenServer to unixWare Computergram International August 26 1997 via Gale General OneFile SCO Plans Big E II Love In to Head Off Sun s Intel Campaign Computergram International December 18 1997 via Gale General OneFile a b SCO Forum97 Proceedings and Conference Guide Santa Cruz Operation 1997 pp 2 4 5 and associated presentation slides Everett Cath June 22 1999 SCO perks up its Java performance Computing US6931544B1 Method and apparatus for executing multiple JAVA applications on a single JAVA virtual machine U S Patent Office Retrieved July 13 2022 SCO Forum96 Proceedings and Conference Guide Santa Cruz Operation 1996 pp 12 16 19 SCO vs IBM AUUGN 24 2 45 June 2003 a b c d Yager Tom April 12 1999 Sturdy UnixWare aims to oust NT NetWare InfoWorld p 60C a b c Lang Amanda March 10 1998 Santa Cruz hopes Unix servers nix Microsoft s NT The Financial Post Toronto p 10 via Newspapers com a b c d Niccolai James Songini Marc March 16 1998 SCO makes run at glass house Network World pp 1 60 a b c d e f g h SCO Ends Four Year Slump With 17m Profits New Business Computergram International October 27 1999 via Gale General OneFile QuickSpecs SCO UnixWare 7 Compaq and SCO Partnership Compaq Support for SCO UnixWare 7 Hewlett Packard Enterprise Retrieved April 26 2021 a b SCO Signals Shift to High End with UnixWare 7 Computergram International March 11 1998 via Gale General OneFile a b c d Uimonen Terho March 22 1999 SCO opens curtain on UnixWare 7 InfoWorld IDG News Service p 12 a b c Burns Christine March 2 1998 SCO gets dough for 64 bit Unix revamp Network World p 12 Fellows William February 25 1999 SCO Data Center UnixWare to Debut at CeBIT Computergram International via Gale General OneFile SCO Taking Clustered UnixWare Multiplatform Computergram International July 15 1998 SCO UnixWare 7 Definitive 2018 Xinuos Retrieved May 12 2021 Intel Backs Uniform Driver Effort Server Standards Computergram International September 16 1998 Santoni Andy September 21 1998 Intel unveils Unix initiative InfoWorld p 6 UDI Sessions at SCO Forum1999 CerTek Software Designs Retrieved May 3 2021 SCO and the Uniform Driver Interface UDI SCO Developer Network Xinuos Retrieved May 3 2021 a b c d Morgan Timothy Prickett December 7 1999 SCO Adds RDP to Tarantella Takes on Citrix Computergram International a b c d Symoens Jeff Szeto Lai Han November 24 1997 Apps Unbound InfoWorld pp 1 111 a b c d e f g h Kimura Donna December 22 1999 SCO stock smashes old record Santa Cruz Sentinel pp A 1 A 12 via Newspapers com a b Deckmyn Dominique March 1 2000 SCO makes ASP play Computerworld a b c Berinato Scott December 13 1999 SCO taking Tarantella to NT Company moves away from UnixWare focusing instead on application hosting PC Week p 20 via Gale General OneFile Krasne Alexandra August 19 1999 Web interface makes Unix friendlier CNN IDG a b c d Vijayan Jaikumar November 2 1998 Unix regroups against NT at the high end Computerworld pp 1 105 Includes Vendors pitch 64 bit Unix for Merced sidebar a b Caldera Systems completes Santa Cruz acquisitions Deseret News May 8 2001 a b c SCO Exec Says The Company May Revive Project Monterey Information Week August 30 2002 Norton R D June 1998 Where Are The World s Top 100 I T Firms And Why PDF Bryant College Kirchner Jake September 22 1998 The PC Magazine 100 Most Influential Companies PC Magazine pp 100 128 a b c d Santa Cruz Operation Announces Losses After Restructuring Computergram International October 28 1997 Retrieved April 17 2021 via Gale General OneFile a b Perez Steve April 22 1998 SCO elects co founder as CEO Santa Cruz Sentinel p B 5 via Newspapers com a b c SCO warns of sharp shortcoming CNET July 9 1998 SCO Updates Its Original OpenServer Unix Computergram International August 18 1998 a b c d e f Orlowski Andrew April 30 2015 SCO Groklaw and the Monterey mystery that never was The Register Shankland Stephen July 8 1999 Intel s Merced chip may slip further CNET UnixWare Apps Will Run on Bravo Unix Computergram International September 15 1998 a b c Kimura Donna October 27 1998 SCO IBM go after Windows NT Santa Cruz Sentinel p B 4 via Newspapers com a b c d e Connor Deni November 9 1998 Monterey Intel s premier Unix OS Network World p 19 via Gale General OneFile a b Weil Nancy Scannell Ed Pendery David November 2 1998 IBM rallies industry giants behind 64 bit Unix version InfoWorld p 36 via Gale General OneFile a b c d Hausman Eric Glascock Stuart November 2 1998 Just when You Thought it was Safe A New Unix Computer Reseller News pp 7 14 ProQuest 227566409 via ProQuest Songini Marc August 6 1999 IBM Monterey isn t the end of AIX Network World p 15 via Gale General OneFile Is IBM Really Killing Project Monterey HPCWire August 25 2000 Eyes David Record Ronald Joe February 1999 SCO and the Open Source Movement SCO World Archived from the original on November 21 2000 a b c Kimura Donna October 27 1999 SCO sets earnings record santa Cruz sentinel p B 5 via Newspapers com a b c d e f Boulton Guy July 22 2000 Caldera May Buy California Company The Salt Lake Tribune pp B 5 B 10 via Newspapers com a b c Pittman Jennifer August 31 1999 SCO stock climbs Linux growth cited Santa Cruz Sentinel p B 4 via Newspapers com a b c d Santa Cruz Operation Warns of Earnings Shortfall The New York Times Reuters July 11 2000 a b c d e f g h i Pittman Jennifer October 16 2000 Parting Company Local high tech firm prepares to merge spin off and disappear santa Cruz Sentinel pp A 1 A 10 via Newspapers com See also New Caldera employees to remain in Santa Cruz and Tarantella focuses on Web software sidebars same by line same pages Pittman Jennifer August 17 1999 SCO stock CEO on a high note Santa Cruz Sentinel pp A 1 A 12 via Newspapers com a b c Tarantella Inc SCO s Second Coming Dataquest India September 22 2000 a b c d Deckmyn Dominique March 27 2000 SCO Reorganizes Expects Low Sales Computerworld p 32 a b c Weiss Todd R September 8 2000 SCO lays off 19 of its staff as it repositions itself Computerworld Lea Graham August 2 2000 Caldera goes Unix with SCO acquisition The Register a b c Malinkoff Marina August 3 2000 SCO spins off two divisions for cash stock Santa Cruz Sentinel pp A1 A12 via Newspapers com a b Panettieri Joseph C August 14 2000 Red Hat and Caldera get in the ring Pt II ZDNet a b Shankland Stephen Caldera deal provides ammunition against Red Hat CNET c February 1 2001 date on article now on website is wrong a b Shankland Stephen February 9 2001 Caldera Systems expands Unix acquisition plans CNet Archived from the original on June 12 2001 Caldera Completes Acquisition of Two SCO Divisions Becomes Largest Linux Company in the World with Global Services Support Press release Caldera Systems May 8 2001 SCO Announces Official Closing of Sale of Two Divisions to Caldera Press release Tarantella May 7 2001 Archived from the original on October 1 2007 Retrieved January 23 2007 Grusauskas Maria September 23 2013 An Insider s Look at Coworking in Santa Cruz Santa Cruz Life Retrieved May 13 2021 Bruce Marshall Steinberg Legacy com January 10 2008 Retrieved May 8 2021 Buchok James March 19 2003 IBM does the Tarantella ITBusiness ca Lasnier Guy August 21 1991 Corporate cultures splash at SCO industry forum Santa Cruz Sentinel p B5 via Newspapers com Perez Steve August 24 1995 SCO Forum gets bigger each year Santa Cruz Sentinel p C3 via Newspapers com QuoteGeek Your favorite quotations online Katharine Hammer July 23 1999 Archived from the original on December 10 2008 Retrieved May 20 2008 Speaking at the 1997 SCO Forum Douglas Adams said The difference between us and a computer is that the computer is blindingly stupid but it is capable of being stupid many many million times a second SCO Forum98 Conference Schedule SCO Archived from the original on December 5 1998 Retrieved May 20 2008 Frazier Belinda November 1 1995 Linux at SCO Forum Linux Journal Retrieved May 20 2008 SCO Forum s Legendary Social Events VisionWare Archived from the original on December 6 1998 Retrieved May 20 2008 Birnstock Andrew April 1994 It s showtime UNIX Review p 7 via Gale Academic OneFile Leibovitch Evan August 30 2000 SCO Forum This ain t no trade show ZDNet Pittman Jennifer August 17 1997 Techies turn out for SCO forum Santa Cruz Sentinel p D1 via Newspapers com Ronald Joe Record August 23 1994 Did you know that SCO broadcast the first live music on the Internet SCO Retrieved March 30 2008 a b c Markoff John July 4 1994 Cyberspace s Most Wanted Hacker Eludes F B I Pursuit The New York Times pp 1 36 a b c Johnson John January 8 1989 Computer an Umbilical Cord to His Soul Dark Side Hacker Seen as Electronic Terrorist Los Angeles Times a b c d Hafner Katie Markoff John 1991 Cyberpunk Outlaws and Hackers on the Computer Frontier New York Simon amp Schuster pp 86 91 Marino Stephen motibloc s Playlists YouTube Retrieved May 14 2008 External links editThe Santa Cruz Operation Inc archived web site sco com from 1997 02 15 to 2001 04 05 www ocston com Alumni directory for the former Santa Cruz Operation Youtube com Motibloc s video account with collection of SCO Follies videos The Santa Cruz Operation s timeline of its own history 1999 The SCO Group s timeline of its own history 2003 Jorn Barger s Timeline of GNU Linux and Unix 2002 David P Bianco The Santa Cruz Operation Inc International Directory of Company Histories 2000 as hosted at Encyclopedia com SCO Company History at the Operating System Documentation Project 2006 William Bader s SCO History site 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Santa Cruz Operation amp oldid 1217184889, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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