Mark Williams Company
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2019) |
Industry | Software industry |
---|---|
Founded | 1977 in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Founders | Robert Swartz |
Defunct | 1995 |
Fate | Disestablished |
Headquarters | , U.S. |
Products | Coherent |
The Mark Williams Company was a small software company in Chicago, Illinois (later moved to Northbrook) that created Coherent, one of the first Unix-like operating systems for IBM PCs and several C programming language compilers. It was founded by Robert Swartz in 1977[1] and discontinued operations in 1995. The name comes from the middle name of Robert Swartz's father, William Mark Swartz.
Robert Swartz moved the company (originally producing a soft drink called Dr. Enuf[2][3]) into software with his father's help and the company became known as the Mark Williams Company.
Mark Williams won a patent lawsuit (U.S. patent 4,956,809) centered on 'byte ordering'.[citation needed] Separately, and at that time,[when?] Linux had made serious inroads in the UNIX clone market. Since Coherent was a commercially available package and Linux was distributed freely on the Internet via their GNU public license, Coherent sales plummeted and Swartz had no choice but to cease operations in 1995.[citation needed]
Products[edit]
- Produced Coherent, a clone of Unix.
- csd, C source debugger.[4]
- Let's C, low-cost professional C compiler for the IBM PC.[5]
- Mark Williams C for CP/M-86.
- Mark Williams C for the Atari ST, first major C programming environment for the ST computers.
- XYBasic, a process control BASIC running on CP/M that could be burned on to memory (EPROM) and run on an 8080 standalone processor.
References[edit]
- ^ Ness, Stephen. "XYBASIC". Ness Software. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
- ^ Lee, Joseph. "Dr. Enuf: The story of Johnson City Tennessee's most famous product". Tazewell-Orange.com. Retrieved 2013-03-03.
In 1949 William Mark Swartz, President of Mark Williams Chemical Co. of Chicago, Ill., decided to create a soft drink that would relieve fatigue, headaches, indigestion etc…. He applied for a trademark for the drink on May 19, 1951.
- ^ Sauceman, Fred (2009). The Place Setting: Timeless Tastes of the Mountain South. Vol. 3. Mercer Univ. Press. pp. 89–97. ISBN 9780881461404.
According to corporate lore, Bill Schwartz [sic], a Chicago chemist, developed the formula after hearing his co-workers complain of lethargy.
- ^ "Does your C compiler understand you're only human? (advertisement)". PC Magazine. May 14, 1985. p. 284.
- ^ Brown, T. D. (1990). C for Fortran Programmers. Silicon Press. p. x. ISBN 0-929306-01-5.
External links[edit]
- START Vol. 1 No. 3 Mark Williams C & Menu by Arick Anders
- START Vol. 2 No. 2 Mark Williams C 2.0 by Arick Anderson
- Mark Williams Company documentation