In December 1991, USL combined with Novell to form the
Univel joint venture. The goal was to make the "
Destiny" desktop for Intel commodity hardware, which would be USL's first shrink-wrapped binary product, with the necessary resources for sales, marketing, and distribution being moved into the new entity.
Kanwal Rekhi, a Novell vice president who helped launch Univel, said the goal was to create a "Unix for the masses". A May 1992
InfoWorld interview with Pieper captured some of the ambitions of USL at the time, as Pieper said: "It is not just a new Unix version; rather it is the creation of an entire model change for Unix that says there are better ways to bring the benefits and features of Unix into a distributed PC environment. The earlier model did not allow Unix to play in the low-end market because of its size, complexity, and cost. The new model calls for business partnerships, such as the one with Novell, to deliver Unix to the commercial marketplace." Pieper acknowledged that similar Unix efforts had failed in the past, but said that the presence of Novell's PC presence and marketing experience as well as the interest of Intel would make the difference this time. Indeed, Pieper had aspirations to be another
Bill Gates: "I want to be in the same position." It was based on the
Unix System V release 4.2 kernel. The
MoOLIT toolkit was used for the
windowing system, allowing the user to choose between an
OPEN LOOK or
MOTIF-like look and feel at run time. In order to make the system more robust on commodity desktop hardware the
Veritas VXFS journaling file system was used in place of the
UFS file system used in SVR4. Networking support in UnixWare included both
TCP/IP and interoperability with Novell's
NetWare protocols of
IPX/SPX. Initial sales of UnixWare were underwhelming, with Unix facing a difficult time in the PC market. This was in part because Windows already had a stronghold there, in part because USL's third-party licensing payment obligations made low-cost sales uneconomical, and in part because of a lack of applications to run on UnixWare. == Acquisition by Novell ==