Difference between revisions of "Sun Microsystems"
From Computer History Wiki
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(→External links: Link to Vaughan Pratt's recollections.) |
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* [http://sun1.sunhelp.org/ SunHelp] - much Sun material | * [http://sun1.sunhelp.org/ SunHelp] - much Sun material | ||
** [http://sun1.sunhelp.org/field-engineer-handbook/20th-ed-NOV-99/unzipped/sun_feh_1.5/wcd00094/wcd09466.htm Field Engineering Handbook (20th edition)] | ** [http://sun1.sunhelp.org/field-engineer-handbook/20th-ed-NOV-99/unzipped/sun_feh_1.5/wcd00094/wcd09466.htm Field Engineering Handbook (20th edition)] | ||
+ | * [https://www.computermuseum.org.uk/fixed_pages/cadlink.html Vaughan Pratt's recollections of events leading up to the forming of Sun Microsystems] | ||
[[Category: Computer Manufacturers]] | [[Category: Computer Manufacturers]] |
Revision as of 08:39, 22 January 2024
Sun Microsystems (Sun) was founded in California in 1982. They were started as a spin-off from Stanford University, to build the SUN workstation.
Of relevance to hobbyists include their Sun-1, Sun-2, Sun-3 machines, all based on Motorola 68000 family CPUs, early SPARC based computers and their software such as NFS, SunOS and Solaris. Sun was acquired by Oracle in 2010.