The
AIM alliance was announced on October 2, 1991, yielding the historic first technology partnership between Apple and IBM. One of its many lofty goals was to somehow eventually merge Apple's user-friendly graphical interface and desktop applications market with IBM's highly scalable Unix server market, allowing the two companies to enter what Apple believed to be an emerging "general desktop open systems market". This was touched upon by Apple's November 1991 announcement of
A/UX 3.0. The upcoming
A/UX 4.0 (never actually released) would target the PowerOpen Environment
ABI, merge features of
IBM's
AIX variant of Unix into
A/UX, and use the
OSF/1 kernel from the
Open Software Foundation. A/UX 3.0 would serve as an "important migration path" to this new system, making Unix and System 7 applications compliant with PowerOpen. A/UX 4.0 and AIX were intended to run on a variety of IBM's
POWER and PowerPC hardware, and on Apple's
PowerPC based hardware. The need for the POE reduced due to the increasing availability of
Unix-like operating systems on PowerPC, such as
Linux distributions and AIX. The
PowerOpen Association was formed to promote the POE and test for conformance, and disbanded in 1995. That year, other AIM elements disbanded. ==Overview==