My opening question for oral exams is an icebreaker for nervous students because no answer is wrong. It always depends on the application.
Operating systems (OSs) provide no business value on their own. Their sole purpose is to ease the development, integration, and operation of applications—that is, to provide the "right" set of abstractions and policies (and map them efficiently to the underlying hardware) for a particular application use case. The application use case may be your general-purpose desktop computer, an embedded real-time system, or your business service running in the cloud. The ideal OS provides exactly what is needed for your application—but nothing more.
No entries found
Log in to Read the Full Article
Sign In
Sign in using your ACM Web Account username and password to access premium content if you are an ACM member, Communications subscriber or Digital Library subscriber.
Need Access?
Please select one of the options below for access to premium content and features.
Create a Web Account
If you are already an ACM member, Communications subscriber, or Digital Library subscriber, please set up a web account to access premium content on this site.
Join the ACM
Become a member to take full advantage of ACM's outstanding computing information resources, networking opportunities, and other benefits.
Subscribe to Communications of the ACM Magazine
Get full access to 50+ years of CACM content and receive the print version of the magazine monthly.
Purchase the Article
Non-members can purchase this article or a copy of the magazine in which it appears.