Serlet
was part of a large crew of former NeXT employees who came with Jobs
when he returned to running Apple in the late 90s. Serlet had
contributed much to NeXTSTEP and OpenStep, the heart of OS X software.
He also worked on WebObjects and CoreFoundation, building on the work of
his predecessor in the Software Engineering VP job, Avie Tevanian. He
was with Apple for 14 years (including a decade-long stint at Ariba), and is also working with a cloud-based startup Upthere.
Parallels is best known for its self-named product, one of the three major virtualization solutions for running Windows and other operating systems on the Mac, allowing it to be the most versatile of the three mainstream platforms in its ability to run nearly any other operating system (past or present). The company started in 2004 primarily focusing on Windows and Linux server virtualization, but came to prominence when Apple unveiled the Intel-based version of OS X in 2006 and the first Mac version came out. The company continues to sell the Plesk server automation software.
Parallels is best known for its self-named product, one of the three major virtualization solutions for running Windows and other operating systems on the Mac, allowing it to be the most versatile of the three mainstream platforms in its ability to run nearly any other operating system (past or present). The company started in 2004 primarily focusing on Windows and Linux server virtualization, but came to prominence when Apple unveiled the Intel-based version of OS X in 2006 and the first Mac version came out. The company continues to sell the Plesk server automation software.
This aticle comes from:http://www.macnn.com/articles/12/07/17/parc.next.veteran.helped.create.os.x/
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