This remarkable anthology allows the pioneers who orchestrated the
major breakthroughs in operating system technology to describe
their work in their own words. From the batch processing systems of
the 1950s to the distributed systems of the 1990s, Tom Kilburn,
David Howarth, Bill Lynch, Fernando Corbato, Robert Daley, Sandy
Fraser, Dennis Ritchie, Ken Thompson, Edsger Dijkstra, Per Brinch
Hansen, Soren Lauesen, Barbara Liskov, Joe Stoy, Christopher
Strachey, Butler Lampson, David Redell, Brian Randell, Andrew
Tanenbaum, and others describe the systems they designed. The
volume details such classic operating systems as the Atlas, B5000,
Exec II, Egdon, CTSS, Multics, Titan, Unix, THE, RC 4000, Venus,
Boss 2, Solo, OS 6, Alto, Pilot, Star, WFS, Unix United, and Amoeba
systems. An introductory essay on the evolution of operating
systems summarizes the papers and helps puts them into a larger
perspective. This provocative journey captures the historic
contributions of operating systems to software design, concurrent
programming, graphic user interfaces, file systems, personal
computing, and distributed systems. It also fully portrays how
operating systems designers think. It's ideal for everybody in the
field, from students to professionals, academics to enthusiasts.
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