Throughout the years I was doing business in Asia, they always made it quite clear that they wanted to be independant of US technology & this covered chips & software.
Most people may not remember the Japan (1980s to early 1990s) TRON project - it was a pretty big deal & scared the s*** out of US IT vendors at the time. The name got corrupted when a kiddie cyberworld movie of the same name came out. But a Google search on the name is bound to bring up the details. (Hmmmm - here goes ...)
[link|http://www.japanlaw.com/lawletter/april87/das.htm|1. Found this one]
I was in Korea & Japan a lot at the time & both countries were scrambling to leapfrog US but the funny part was they needed US technology to do it & we knew it.
Korea had a project to produce 4 32-bit processors on a single chip - Japan was going for 32 & 64-bit single chip & backed by the TRON project (which I am sure was derived from UNIX in that it was to be scalable & OPEN. But, resembled todays Java and was OOT based - the intention was that TRON would be common to all sizes of device (Linux can now claim this)).
I tend to think it died when the US 'chip wars' got under way as this left Asia so far behind the curve that Intel created. Even IBM couldn't break thru - it was IBM & Motorola who took on Intel. Also the US Govt blacklisted TRON as an enemy of the state (see link 3. below).
In UNIX, the Unix wars also had the side effect that Unix moved so far ahead of Asian efforts that the likes of TRON got left behind but sadly because of the fragmentation of Unix, NT got through the gap & cleaned up, until Linux emerged. If Linux fragments then it too will become doomed but as long as we have the cult of Linus, I think the fragmentation can be avoided.
Some of the links below argue that TRON's time is yet to come. (www.tron.org).
Cheers Doug Marker
Some more stuff on TRON
[link|http://www.tron.org/show-e.html|2. Tron.org - exhibition planned in Dec 2002]
[link|http://www.japanecho.co.jp/jeu/arch/010707.html|3. TRON has *not* dissapeared - watch this space]
"TRON, a computer operating system proposed by University of Tokyo professor Ken Sakamura, has recently been seeing its share of the OS market rise rapidly. TRON's development began in earnest in 1984 with the support of the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (now Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry), but it was temporarily sidetracked in 1989, when Washington listed the software as a potential target of sanctions under the Super 301 provisions of the 1988 Omnibus Trade Act. TRON did not disappear, however, and is actually used in more devices today than even Microsoft's Windows. The potential new global standard in operating systems is the subject of Japan Economic Update's selection this week from Diamond."
[link|http://www.ascii.co.jp/english/news/archive/98/03/25/#1|4. TRON to take on Windows]
* TRON, Japan's Answer to Windows, Continues Steady Development in the Far East
Outside the Far East, few people are familiar with TRON, The Real-time Operating system Nucleus, which has been developed and implemented, primarily in Japan, for over a decade. The concept behind TRON is a systems engineer's ideal: an elegant, "lightweight," extensible operating system applicable to personal computers, networking and communications, embedded systems, and real-time automation control. Earlier this month, the faithful met at Tokyo University for the "14th TRON Project International Symposium," to report on the past year's achievements; set priorities for the coming year; and renew their commitment to fighting the hegemony of Microsoft.