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  3. Best OS of all time - well there's a surprise!

Best OS of all time - well there's a surprise!

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  • K Kevin McFarlane

    http://channel9.msdn.com/ShowPost.aspx?postid=277141[^]

    Kevin

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    Dave Kreskowiak
    wrote on last edited by
    #26

    BS! It's CPM and we all know it!! :->

    Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic

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    • C Christian Graus

      I'd say this was quite predictable.

      Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog

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      GaryWoodfine
      wrote on last edited by
      #27

      So predictabel that I predicted that shall a poll would be somewhere on the web, and funny enough I predicted the answer too. Move over Nostradamus I'm coming through.

      Kind Regards, Gary


      My Website || My Blog || My Articles

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      • R RoswellNX

        Clickok wrote:

        I would like vote on "Other". This OS is awesome :cool:

        As in anything but what's listed...heh heh, you're the ultimate rebel:laugh: Roswell P.S. I'm surprised they didn't include VAX/VMS...

        "Angelinos -- excuse me. There will be civility today."
        Antonio VillaRaigosa
        City Mayor, Los Angeles, CA

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        Clickok
        wrote on last edited by
        #28

        :-D:laugh:;)


        Engaged in learning of English grammar ;)
        For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.(John 3:16) :badger:

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        • C Chris Austin

          I'm not really a mac guy, but what do you find bloated about OS X?

          My Blog A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects. - -Lazarus Long

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          RoswellNX
          wrote on last edited by
          #29

          Chris Austin wrote:

          I'm not really a mac guy, but what do you find bloated about OS X?

          Well, it's not all that bloated when you strip it down to the bare minimum, but it does feel a bit heavy loaded on pre-'99 macs if installed as is. Most people used to XP won't even notice, given the amount of spyware and the overwrought GUI, but those who prefer faster minimalistic o/s's will see the difference. Though it is nice to be able to bring up the unix shell and do some things using scripts. I can't say much good about the Aqua interface. It may be pretty, but why do i need extra garbage when i'm already doing something CPU-intensive? The bright colors of the UI affect your color perception and the buttons themselves feel a bit out of place, having borrowed the same mistake that windows has stuck with since the days of '95. Mac o/s classic got it right, close on the left and collapse and hide on the right...keeps you from accidentally quitting out of something. You may not entirely agree with me, but then again it's only my personal opinion. Try working with only 64MB RAM instead of 1GB and you will see what i mean :) My PowerBook has 256MB and the iMac 128MB, which is still less, but isn't bad having replaced the drives with nice 7000rpm ones, since Photoshop mostly writes to the page file anyway... Roswell :)

          "Angelinos -- excuse me. There will be civility today."
          Antonio VillaRaigosa
          City Mayor, Los Angeles, CA

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          • K Kevin McFarlane

            http://channel9.msdn.com/ShowPost.aspx?postid=277141[^]

            Kevin

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            Fernando A Gomez F
            wrote on last edited by
            #30

            Minix 3! :D

            A polar bear is a bear whose coordinates has been changed in terms of sine and cosine. Personal Site

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            • C Chris Austin

              Same here. VM is simply an engineering marvel. It's the new old thing these days.

              My Blog A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects. - -Lazarus Long

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              Rajiv Bhagwat
              wrote on last edited by
              #31

              Even better was AOS - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AOS/VS[^] with clean implementations of Multiprocessing - Multithreading, excellent CLI (command lang interpreter), IPC, language independent subroutine calling (aka .Net), excellent text editors, Adventure (when the bosses were not around) and even 2 column forefather of Norton commander! All this in 1979, shortly followed with the 32 bit version. No direct support for graphics, though, as was the norm then. But, the best thing was: the sources were available to the support organisations (on microfiche) : they were very well written, almost each line was commented and very understandable. (Assembly + DG/L [Algol like], as C was just getting in...)

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              • G Gary R Wheeler

                Twits. Didn't even include VAX/VMS in the list.


                Software Zen: delete this;

                Fold With Us![^]

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                Stuart Dootson
                wrote on last edited by
                #32

                The first real OS that I ever used...good memories...

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                • S stephen hazel

                  Christian Graus wrote:

                  The Amiga OS, right ?

                  RIGHT ON, my bruh THAH !!

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                  NRobbins
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #33

                  You're having a laugh the Atari ST's OS was far superior to anything that the Amiga ever had! But the best was clearly the OS on the Acorn RISC OS - beautiful, functional and easy to program!

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                  • K Kevin McFarlane

                    http://channel9.msdn.com/ShowPost.aspx?postid=277141[^]

                    Kevin

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                    Antony Clements
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #34

                    it was sponsored by big green no doubt.

                    Life is nothing but an individuals perception of an immortals dream. - ME

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                    • R Ravi Bhavnani

                      That's rubbish. Everyone knows the best OS was MVS[^]. /ravi

                      This is your brain on Celcius Home | Music | Articles | Freeware | Trips ravib(at)ravib(dot)com

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                      Mewing
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #35

                      The best ever OS .... has to be GEORGE3, it was at least 2 generations ahead of its contemporaries. It had Virtual Memory and Virtual Filestore and sophisticated workload scheduling, the OS ran the operators and some very large businesses.... and that was back in the 1960's when things were measured in K's not M's and G's were never even dreamt of and tape was king because no one could afford those new-fangled little disc things (which weighed in at about 32lbs a piece). But it wasn't American and went the way of the British Empire. On Virtual Memory.... when IBM 'invented' it for OS360 they ran an ad .... "Tomorrow came Today to which ICL responded with a similar ad "No, Tomorrow came Yesterday".

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                      • C Christian Graus

                        The Amiga OS, right ? What a stupid idea for a poll. Vista is the best, precisely because most people who voted, have not used it, and are still believing the advertisements are true.

                        Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog

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                        Antony Clements
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #36

                        Christian Graus wrote:

                        The Amiga OS, right ?

                        Whatever happened ot the supposed rebirth of Amiga with their own OS?

                        Life is nothing but an individuals perception of an immortals dream. - ME

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                        • N NRobbins

                          You're having a laugh the Atari ST's OS was far superior to anything that the Amiga ever had! But the best was clearly the OS on the Acorn RISC OS - beautiful, functional and easy to program!

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                          Antony Clements
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #37

                          NRobbins wrote:

                          But the best was clearly the OS on the Acorn RISC OS - beautiful, functional and easy to program!

                          Someone is still living in the days of Neanderthal.

                          Life is nothing but an individuals perception of an immortals dream. - ME

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                          • C Chris Austin

                            I'm not really a mac guy, but what do you find bloated about OS X?

                            My Blog A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects. - -Lazarus Long

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                            A Offline
                            Antony Clements
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #38

                            Chris Austin wrote:

                            I'm not really a mac guy, but what do you find bloated about OS X?

                            My thoughts exactly. I've always been lead to believe that the family of mac OS's have been built around a unix kernel. which is exactly why they are more stable than windows machines, less resource dependant and therefore faster when compared to a windows machine running on an equivelant processor, and a processing powerhouses but useless for non-productivity software. Which is exactly why graphic developers desktop publishing and a large number of other industries rely almost entirely on Apple machines... well they used to.

                            Life is nothing but an individuals perception of an immortals dream. - ME

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                            • K Kevin McFarlane

                              http://channel9.msdn.com/ShowPost.aspx?postid=277141[^]

                              Kevin

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                              ednrgc
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #39

                              BasicXL on the Atari 800XL, hands down.

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                              • K Kevin McFarlane

                                http://channel9.msdn.com/ShowPost.aspx?postid=277141[^]

                                Kevin

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                                codemunkeh
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #40

                                I really like one of the comments at the bottom of the page... "there should be a 'don't bother me about petty things like this again' checkbox" I had installed the RC1 (or was it Beta 0.9 B release 2?) whatever it was, i installed it onto my F: drive (with XP on C: ) and had it as my primary OS. What I found was that I couldnt' access C: as much as i could access F: under XP. I remember saying to someone about it, 1 of my 2 complaints: "do I have to be bigger than Jesus to access a damn file!" The other being those damn security alerts - "Would you like to open this?" Well, I went to the hassle of clicking the box, so no I wouldn't like to open it! I think the problem with Vista is that it looks good but the user has become too closed in on (security-wise). I like it better than XP but, if anyone uses it, runs a decent security configuration (ZoneAlarm = good firewall) and is confident enough to live without the security features (which is 80% of people), disable it! You'll save yourself a thousand bucks a year on new monitors.

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                                • K Kevin McFarlane

                                  http://channel9.msdn.com/ShowPost.aspx?postid=277141[^]

                                  Kevin

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                                  Chris Charabaruk
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #41

                                  I can't believe that nobody said GEOS[^] because it was indeed awesome.

                                  Christopher S. 'coldacid' Charabaruk E-mail: chris at coldacid dot ent Web: http://coldacid.net/

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                                  • N NRobbins

                                    You're having a laugh the Atari ST's OS was far superior to anything that the Amiga ever had! But the best was clearly the OS on the Acorn RISC OS - beautiful, functional and easy to program!

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                                    stephen hazel
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #42

                                    NRobbins wrote:

                                    the Atari ST's OS was far superior to anything that the Amiga ever had!

                                    Eh? Them's fightin' words :) You can back those up? Did the atari even have a c compiler or were you stuck with asm? Was the gui a set of libraries on top of the core os? Did it have a cool name like "Intuition"? I dunno. Maybe it was better, but i migrated from c64 asm to amiga c. And i spent a looooong time gettin comfy on that os. (till it died.) I still miss that ole amiga. built my first midi sequencer on the thing :) ...Steve

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                                    • S stephen hazel

                                      NRobbins wrote:

                                      the Atari ST's OS was far superior to anything that the Amiga ever had!

                                      Eh? Them's fightin' words :) You can back those up? Did the atari even have a c compiler or were you stuck with asm? Was the gui a set of libraries on top of the core os? Did it have a cool name like "Intuition"? I dunno. Maybe it was better, but i migrated from c64 asm to amiga c. And i spent a looooong time gettin comfy on that os. (till it died.) I still miss that ole amiga. built my first midi sequencer on the thing :) ...Steve

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                                      destynova
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #43

                                      Steve Hazel wrote:

                                      Did the atari even have a c compiler or were you stuck with asm?

                                      Sure, it had Pure C, Lattice C, HiSoft C? and the free Sozobon C compiler, which was pretty good (produced small enough code too!).

                                      Steve Hazel wrote:

                                      Was the gui a set of libraries on top of the core os?

                                      Well, kinda. Wasn't the Amiga OS loaded off disk, rather than ROM like the ST's TOS and GEM gui layer? This means they could keep releasing better versions of Kickstart, whereas TOS updates were much less frequent. I did find the Amiga's GUI and unix-style commandline functionality with pipes etc really impressive, but only after spending my teenage life working in GEM :)

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                                      • D destynova

                                        Steve Hazel wrote:

                                        Did the atari even have a c compiler or were you stuck with asm?

                                        Sure, it had Pure C, Lattice C, HiSoft C? and the free Sozobon C compiler, which was pretty good (produced small enough code too!).

                                        Steve Hazel wrote:

                                        Was the gui a set of libraries on top of the core os?

                                        Well, kinda. Wasn't the Amiga OS loaded off disk, rather than ROM like the ST's TOS and GEM gui layer? This means they could keep releasing better versions of Kickstart, whereas TOS updates were much less frequent. I did find the Amiga's GUI and unix-style commandline functionality with pipes etc really impressive, but only after spending my teenage life working in GEM :)

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                                        stephen hazel
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #44

                                        destynova wrote:

                                        but only after spending my teenage life working in GEM

                                        Well, then... that's all good mah bruh THAH from anothah mothAH...:) I'm still workin on that midi sequencer I started way back then, too http://shazware.com/ditty[^] And I still use the text editor I wrote back on the C64 in 6502 asm (ported to C++/windows) for editing my code TO THIS DAY. (But probably nobody else could love that text editor but me) I can write code as fast (if not faster) than the next guy with it :) http://shazware.com/shaz/ned.html[^] Ok. Sorry to go off like that...:~ But you got me thinkin bout them good ole daze... How did i get to be 42 ?? And how did my daughter turn into a high school student so fast ?? In the immortal words of Charlie Brown... AUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUGH !!! ...Steve

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                                        • S stephen hazel

                                          destynova wrote:

                                          but only after spending my teenage life working in GEM

                                          Well, then... that's all good mah bruh THAH from anothah mothAH...:) I'm still workin on that midi sequencer I started way back then, too http://shazware.com/ditty[^] And I still use the text editor I wrote back on the C64 in 6502 asm (ported to C++/windows) for editing my code TO THIS DAY. (But probably nobody else could love that text editor but me) I can write code as fast (if not faster) than the next guy with it :) http://shazware.com/shaz/ned.html[^] Ok. Sorry to go off like that...:~ But you got me thinkin bout them good ole daze... How did i get to be 42 ?? And how did my daughter turn into a high school student so fast ?? In the immortal words of Charlie Brown... AUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUGH !!! ...Steve

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                                          destynova
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #45

                                          Steve Hazel wrote:

                                          Ok. Sorry to go off like that... But you got me thinkin bout them good ole daze...

                                          Wow, I remember chatting briefly to you about your MIDI editor, Ditty, maybe 7 years ago or so. I'll admit I haven't tried it since then though.

                                          Steve Hazel wrote:

                                          And I still use the text editor I wrote back on the C64 in 6502 asm (ported to C++/windows) for editing my code TO THIS DAY.

                                          Anything but the working on the C64's BASIC interpreter... that was an awful environment, and an awful BASIC implementation too really. I wonder if anyone else remembers GFA Basic on the Atari ST... *rambles*

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