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Anatomy of the Linux kernel

30 July 2008 0 views No Comment

While is arguably the most popular open system, its is actually quite short considering the timeline of systems. In the early days of , programmers developed on the bare hardware in the hardware’s language. The lack of an system meant that only one application (and one user) could use the large and expensive device at a time. Early systems were developed in the 1950s to provide a simpler development experience. Examples include the General Motors System () developed for the 701 and the Monitor System (FMS) developed by North American Aviation for the 709.

In the 1960s, Massachusetts Institute of Technology () and a host of companies developed an experimental system called Multics (or Multiplexed Information and Service) for the GE-645. One of the developers of this system, AT&T, dropped out of Multics and developed their own system in 1970 called Unics. Along with this system was the C language, for which C was developed and then rewritten to make system development portable.

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