A Neutral Look at Operating Systems
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The purpose of this book is to provide a neutral view of as many Operating Systems as possible. This book strives to provide solid information on Operating Systems without the ever-prevalent "distribution/Operating System bias".
Wikipedia has a comparison of operating systems.
Brief contents
edit- Unix and derivatives
- CP/M and derivatives
- RISC OS - Wikipedia:RISC OS
- EROS - Wikipedia:EROS
- AmigaOS - Wikipedia:AmigaOS
- BeOS - Wikipedia:BeOS
- Mac OS
- z/OS - Wikipedia: z/OS
Extended contents
editThis lists the operating system variants contained in this book.
- Unix derivatives
- CP/M derivatives
- Mac OS
- RISC OS - Wikipedia:RISC OS
- EROS - Wikipedia:EROS
- AmigaOS - Wikipedia:AmigaOS
- BeOS - Wikipedia:BeOS
- z/OS - Wikipedia: z/OS
Authors
edit- Kernigh, expanded Berkeley Software Distribution chapter
- aGGreSSor, expanded AmigaOS chapter
- Other and anonymous contributors
Further reading
edit- "A Neutral Look at Operating Systems" generally looks at OSes designed for desktop and laptop personal computers, which are less than 2% of all the computers in the world.[1] For OSes designed to run on the other 98% of all the computers in the world, see Embedded Systems/Common RTOS and Embedded Control Systems Design/Operating systems.
- Operating System Design
- RTEMS for Embedded Software Developers
- Guide to Unix
- Subject:Linux
- Subject:Microsoft Windows
- ↑ "The Two Percent Solution" by Jim Turley 2002