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#1
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| After looking for some suitable domain names that are still available, Elego Software Solutions (www.elegosoft.com), which has hosted the Modula-3 repositories and web sites for several years, has now secured www.opencm3.net to allow easier access to the CM3 project. http://www.opemcm3.net is now the same as http://modula3.elegosoft.com/cm3/, but shorter and probably easier to remember. Unfortunately www.opencm3.org and the shorter www.cm3.xxx domains are owned by others. Open Critical Mass Modula-3 is a volunteer project maintaining and consistently improving the Modula-3 compiler developed at Digital Research and Critical Mass. It is completely free and can be used for all private and commercial purposes without fee. It comes with megabytes of high quality source code for almost any purpose, including scientific math packages, compiler generator tools, a distributed object system (netobj), SGML and HTML tools, the constraint based graphical editor Juno-2, database interfaces, algorithm animations (mentor), and much more. Critical Mass Modula-3 runs on Linux, FreeBSD, Windows, Mac OS X / Darwin, Solaris, and other Unix operating systems. There's been much work on CM3 in recent months: o Platform independent LONGINT support (64 bit) has been added to the language. o Automatic regression tests have been set up, which are run nightly on several target platforms. Several snapshot archives are available as the result of these nightly runs, too. Results are available via a tinderbox interface, and as result lists for compiler and runtime regression tests and package build results. o Much work is underway on improved Windows support (NT386, NT386GNU). o Several bugs in runtime support and compiler shortcomings have been fixed. o CM3's Reactor(TM) code has been ported to work with the current CM3 sources and will be available as M3IDE as soon as the copyright owner gives his final OK. o Quake has been extended by many useful utility functions. o The current sources can now be browsed at www.opencm3.net as well as the CVS code repository. Have a look at http://www.opencm3.net/ to learn all the details. If you are interested in Modula-3 you should also consider to subscribe to one of the mailing lists (m3announce, m3devel, m3commit) accessible at the web site, as this newsgroup is rarely used for discussions. Olaf Wagner |
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#2
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| Olaf Wagner <wagner@luthien.in-berlin.de> writes: > Open Critical Mass Modula-3 is a volunteer project maintaining and > consistently improving the Modula-3 compiler developed at Digital > Research and Critical Mass. s/Digital Research/Digital Equipment Corporation/, plz. -- Paul Vixie |
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#3
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| Paul Vixie wrote: > Olaf Wagner <wagner@luthien.in-berlin.de> writes: > >> Open Critical Mass Modula-3 is a volunteer project maintaining and >> consistently improving the Modula-3 compiler developed at Digital >> Research and Critical Mass. > > s/Digital Research/Digital Equipment Corporation/, plz. Sorry, of course you're right. The Modula-3 compiler was written by Digital Equipment Corporation (later sold to Compaq and then to HP) at their Systems Research Center, and is completely unrelated to Digital Research. This must have slipped my attention because for me DResearch, another completely unrelated company here in Berlin, is so familiar :-/ Olaf |
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