The
earliest of computers didn’t have an operating system. By the early 1960’s, commercial computer
vendors were supplying quite extensive tools for streamlining the development,
scheduling and execution of jobs on batch processing systems.
Through
the 1960’s, several concepts were developed which drove the development of
operating systems. The IBM System 360
produced a family of mainframe computer that served consumers with differing
capacities and prices. A single
operating system was planned for these computers rather than developing generic
programs for every individual model.
This
concept of a single OS that will fit an entire product line was crucial for the
success of System 360. In fact, IBM’s
current mainframe operating systems are distant relatives of this original
system. The advantage to this is that
applications written for the OS 360 can still be run on modern machines.
The
OS 360 system also contained another important advance affecting today’s
computers: the development of a hard
disk permanent storage device which IBM called DASD.
A
second key development was the concept of time sharing. Time sharing involves sharing the resources
of expensive computers among multiple computer users interacting in real time
with the system. What that essentially
means is that all of the users have the illusion of exclusive access to the
machine. The most famous of time sharing
system was called Multics.
Multics
served as an inspiration to a number of operating systems developed in the
1970’s. Most notably was the Unix
system. Another commercially popular
mini-computer operating system was VMS.
The
first microcomputers did not have the capacity or need for the elaborate
operating systems that had originally been developed for mainframes and
minis. Smaller operating systems were
developed and often loaded from ROM and known as Monitors.
One
notable early disk-based OS was CP/M which was supported on many early
micro-computers and was largely cloned when MS-DOS was created. MS-DOS became wildly popular as the operating
system chosen for the IBM PC.
The
successive operating systems that came from MS-DOS made Microsoft one of the
most profitable companies in the world with the development of Windows. The only other alternative throughout the
1980’s was Mac OS which was tied intimately to the Apple McIntosh computer.
By
the 1990s, the microcomputer had evolved to the point where it became
increasingly desirable. Everyone wanted
a home computer. Microsoft had already
come out with Windows 95 and 98, but people longed for more power and more
options. Microsoft’s response to this
change was the development of Windows NT which served as the basis for
Microsoft’s desktop operating system line that launched in 2001.
Apple
was also rebuilding their own operating system on top of Unix core as Mac OS X
also released in 2001 developing one of the business world’s greatest
rivalries.
Today,
our operating systems usually have a graphical user interface (GUI) which uses
a pointing device such as a mouse of stylus for input in addition to the
keyboard. Older systems – and we mean
REALLY OLD – use a command line interface asking for commands to be entered via
the keyboard.
Both
models are centered on a “shell” which accepts and processes commands from the
user. The user may be asked to click on
a button or type in a command upon an on-screen prompt.
By
far, the most common operating system in use today is Windows XP, but Microsoft
has just released their newest Windows project – Windows Vista. Linux is also another popular OS as is
Unix. We’ll explore them later on in the
book, but each offers its own particular advantages and disadvantages.
Considering
the boom of the technology market, it’s really a surprise that there are so few
operating systems in existence. There
really isn’t an easy explanation for this, but it is a reality. It would only seem logical that with all of
the different computer manufacturers out there, there would be more of a choice
for an OS than what there is. It is
certainly another anomaly in the world of computer technology.
So
what exactly do operating systems do?
Since they really are the “brain” of the computer, they do quite a bit!
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