/O S too/
IBM and
Microsoft's successor to the
MS-DOS
operating system for
Intel 80286 and
Intel 80386-based
microprocessors. It is proof that they couldn't get it
right the second time either. Often called "Half-an-OS". The
design was so
baroque, and the implementation of 1.x so bad,
that 3 years after introduction you could still count the
major application programs shipping for it on the fingers of
two hands, in
unary. Later versions improved somewhat, and
informed hackers now rate them superior to
Microsoft Windows, which isn't saying much. See
second-system effect.
On an
Intel 80386 or better, OS/2 can multitask between
existing
MS-DOS applications. OS/2 is strong on
connectivity and the provision of robust virtual machines.
It can support
Microsoft Windows programs in addition to its
own
native applications. It also supports the
Presentation Manager graphical user interface.
OS/2 supports
hybrid multiprocessing (HMP), which provides
some elements of
symmetric multiprocessing (SMP), using
add-on IBM software called MP/2. OS/2 SMP was planned for
release in late 1993.
After OS/2 1.x the
IBM and
Microsoft partnership split.
IBM continued to develop OS/2 2.0, while Microsoft developed
what was originally intended to be OS/2 3.0 into
Windows NT.
In October 1994, IBM released version OS/2 3.0 (known as
"Warp") but it is only distantly related to
Windows NT.
This version raised the limit on RAM from 16MB to 1GB (like
Windows NT).
IBM introduced networking with "OS/2 Warp Connect", the first
multi-user version. OS/2 Warp 4.0 ("Merlin") is a
network operating system.
http://mit.edu:8001/activities/os2/os2world.html.