Seems to me that the GP was referring to the C abstract machine but used a similar, more common phrase by mistake.
Granting that, I can't say I agree with his point: C has probably ran on more machines than any other language. As an abstraction over machines it is, if not perfect, clearly good enough.
Granting that, I can't say I agree with his point: C has probably ran on more machines than any other language. As an abstraction over machines it is, if not perfect, clearly good enough.