Private | |
Industry | Software |
Fate | Acquired by Platinum Technology Inc. |
Successor | Platinum Technology |
Founded | 1982 |
Founders | Gerald J. Popek, Gregory I. Thiel |
Defunct | August 17, 1995 |
Headquarters | Santa Monica, California, later Inglewood, California, United States |
Key people
|
Gerald J. Popek, CTO and chairman. |
Products |
LOCUS AIX PS/2, AIX 370 AIX TCF OSF/1 AD Merge UnixWare NonStop Clusters |
Number of employees
|
300 |
Locus Computing Corporation was formed in 1982 by Gerald J. Popek and Gregory I. Thiel to commercialize the technologies developed for the LOCUS distributed operating system at UCLA. Locus was notable for commercializing single-system image software and producing the Merge package which allowed the use of DOS and Windows 3.1 software on Unix systems.
Locus was acquired by Platinum Technology Inc in 1995.
Locus was commissioned by IBM to produce a version of the AIX UNIX based operating system for the PS/2 and System/370 ranges. The single-system image capabilities of LOCUS were incorporated under the name of AIX TCF (transparent computing facility).
Locus was commissioned by Intel to produce a multiprocessor version of OSF/1 for the Intel Paragon a massively parallel NORMA (No Remote Memory Access) system. The system was known as OSF/1 AD, where AD stood for "Advanced Development".
To allow inter processor process migration and communication between the individual nodes of the Paragon system they re-worked the TCF technology from LOCUS as Transparent Network Computing, or TNC, inventing the concept of the VPROC (virtual process) an analogy of the VNODE (virtual inode) from the SunOS virtual file system.