Linux (operating system): Difference between revisions

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'''Linux''' is an [[open source software|open source]] [[operating system]]. By strict definition, it is rarely seen by the user, because its job is to be a layer between the user environment and the [[computer hardware|hardware]].
'''Linux''' is an [[open source software|open source]] [[operating system]]. By strict definition, it is rarely seen by the user, because its job is to be a layer between the user environment and the [[computer hardware|hardware]].
Linux started in 1991 by a Finnish college student named [[Linus Torvalds]]. At the time, the majority of [[Unix]] systems were very expensive. The only affordable workstation environment was a proprietary system called [[Minix]]. Although the source code was included with this system, the license fee was still a bit pricey, and it was not as good as the systems the workstations in the universities were running.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 15:19, 21 April 2007

Linux
Gnome screenshot.png
The GNOME desktop on Ubuntu Linux 6.10
Website: http://www.linux.org (unofficial)
Developer: The Open Source community
OS family: Unix-like
Source model: Open source
Supported platforms: x86, x86-64, ia64, DEC Alpha,
Motorola 68k, SUN Sparc, ARM, PowerPC
Kernel type: Modular monolithic
Default user interface (most distros): GUI
License: GNU General Public License
Working state: Current

Template:Dablink

Tux the penguin, the Linux mascot

Linux is an open source operating system. By strict definition, it is rarely seen by the user, because its job is to be a layer between the user environment and the hardware.

Linux started in 1991 by a Finnish college student named Linus Torvalds. At the time, the majority of Unix systems were very expensive. The only affordable workstation environment was a proprietary system called Minix. Although the source code was included with this system, the license fee was still a bit pricey, and it was not as good as the systems the workstations in the universities were running.

References

Related topics

Subtopics

External links