List of operating systems 6
Generic/commodity and other
- BLIS/COBOL
- Bluebottle also known as AOS (a concurrent and active object update to the Oberon operating system)
- BS1000 by Siemens AG
- BS2000 by Siemens AG, now BS2000/OSD from Fujitsu-Siemens Computers (formerly Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme)
- BS3000 by Siemens AG (functionally similar to OS-IV and MSP from Fujitsu)
- FLEX9 (by TSC for Motorola 6809 based machines; successor to FLEX, which was for Motorola 6800 CPUs)
- GEM (windowing GUI for CP/M, DOS, and Atari TOS)
- GEOS (popular windowing GUI for PC, Commodore, Apple computers)
- JavaOS
- JNode JNode.org's OS written 99% in Java (native compiled), provides own JVM and JIT compiler. Based on GNU Classpath
- JX Java operating system that focuses on a flexible and robust operating system architecture developed as an open source system by the University of Erlangen.
- KERNAL (default OS on Commodore 64)
- MERLIN for the Corvus Concept
- MorphOS (Amiga compatible)
- MSP by Fujitsu (successor to OS-IV), now MSP/EX,[2] also known as Extended System Architecture (EXA), for 31-bit mode
- NetWare (networking OS by Novell)
- Oberon (operating system) (developed at ETH-Zürich by Niklaus Wirth et al.) for the Ceres and Chameleon workstation projects.
- OSD/XC by Fujitsu-Siemens (BS2000 ported to an emulation on a Sun SPARC platform)
- OS-IV by Fujitsu (based on early versions of IBM's MVS)
- Pick (often licensed and renamed)
- PRIMOS by Prime Computer (sometimes spelled PR1MOS and PR1ME)
- Sinclair QDOS (multitasking for the Sinclair QL computer)
- SSB-DOS (by TSC for Smoke Signal Broadcasting; a variant of FLEX in most respects)
- SymbOS (GUI based multitasking operating system for Z80 computers)
- Symobi (GUI based modern micro-kernel OS for x86, ARM and PowerPC processors, developed by Miray Software; used and developed further at Technical University of Munich)
- TripOS, 1978
- TurboDOS (Software 2000, Inc.)
- UCSD p-System (portable complete programming environment/operating system/virtual machine developed by a long running student project at UCSD; directed by Prof Kenneth Bowles; written in Pascal)
- VOS by Stratus Technologies with strong influence from Multics
- VOS by Hitachi for its IBM-compatible mainframes, based on IBM's MVS
- VM2000 by Siemens AG
- Visi On (first GUI for early PC machines; not commercially successful)
- VPS/VM (IBM based, main operating system at Boston University for over 10 years.)
For Elektronika BK
Hobby
- AROS (AROS Research Operating System, formerly known as Amiga Research Operating System)
- AtheOS (branched to become Syllable Desktop)
- Syllable Desktop (a modern, independently originated OS; see AtheOS)
- Dreckig OS (uses experimental "megalithic kernel" architecture and has a GUI)[3]
- DSPnano RTOS
- EmuTOS
- EROS (Extremely Reliable Operating System)
- HelenOS, based on a preemptible microkernel design
- LSE/OS
- MenuetOS (extremely compact OS with GUI, written entirely in FASM assembly language)
- KolibriOS (a fork of MenuetOS)
- MikeOS (a 16 bit OS written in assembly)
Embedded
Personal digital assistants (PDAs)
- Symbian OS
- iOS (a subset of Mac OS X)
- Embedded Linux
- Maemo based on Debian deployed on Nokia's Nokia 770, N800 and N810 Internet Tablets.
- MeeGo merger of Moblin and Maemo
- webOS from Palm, Inc., later Hewlett-Packard via acquisition, and most recently at LG Electronics through acquisition from Hewlett-Packard[4]
- OpenZaurus
- Ångström distribution
- Familiar Linux
- Android
- Inferno (distributed OS originally from Bell Labs)
- PenPoint OS
- PEN/GEOS on HP OmniGo 100 and 120
- PVOS
- Palm OS from Palm, Inc; now spun off as PalmSource
- Windows CE, from Microsoft
- Pocket PC from Microsoft, a variant of Windows CE.
- Windows Mobile from Microsoft, a variant of Windows CE.
- Windows Phone from Microsoft,
- DIP DOS on Atari Portfolio
- MS-DOS on Poqet PC, HP 95LX, HP 100LX, HP 200LX, HP 1000CX, HP OmniGo 700LX
- Newton OS on Apple Newton Messagepad
- Magic Cap
- NetBSD
- Plan 9 from Bell Labs
Digital media players
- DSPnano RTOS
- ipodlinux
- RockBox
- iOS (a subset of Mac OS X)
- iriver clix OS
- iPod software
Smartphones and Mobile phones
Main article: Mobile operating system
- BlackBerry OS
- Embedded Linux
- Access Linux Platform
- Android
- bada
- Firefox OS (project name: Boot to Gecko)
- Openmoko Linux
- OPhone
- MeeGo (from merger of Maemo & Moblin)
- Mobilinux
- MotoMagx
- Qt Extended
- Sailfish OS
- Tizen (earlier called LiMo Platform)
- Ubuntu for phone (Ubuntu with GUI for phones/tablets)
- webOS
- PEN/GEOS, GEOS-SC, GEOS-SE
- iOS (a subset of Mac OS X)
- Palm OS
- Symbian platform (successor to Symbian OS)
- Windows Mobile (superseded by Windows Phone)
Routers
- AlliedWare by Allied Telesis (aka Allied Telesyn)
- AirOS by Ubiquiti Networks
- CatOS by Cisco Systems
- Cisco IOS (originally Internetwork Operating System) by Cisco Systems
- DD-WRT by NewMedia-NET
- Inferno (distributed OS originally from Bell Labs)
- IOS-XR by Cisco Systems
- IronWare by Foundry Networks
- JunOS by Juniper Networks
- RouterOS by Mikrotik
- ScreenOS by Juniper Networks, originally from Netscreen
- Timos by Alcatel-Lucent
- FTOS by Force10 Networks
- RTOS by Force10 Networks
Other embedded
- Contiki
- eCos
- FreeBSD
- RetroBSD
- uClinux
- MINIX
- NCOS
- freeRTOS, openRTOS and safeRTOS
- polyBSD (embedded NetBSD)
- REX OS (microkernel OS; usually an embedded cell phone OS)
- ROM-DOS
- TinyOS
- µTasker
- ThreadX
- DSPnano RTOS
- Windows Embedded
- Windows CE
- Windows Embedded Standard
- Windows Embedded Enterprise
- Windows Embedded POSReady
- Wombat OS (microkernel OS; usually a real time embedded OS)
Capability-based
LEGO Mindstorms
Other capability-based
- Cambridge CAP computer operating system demonstrated the use of security capabilities, both in hardware and software, also a useful fileserver. Implemented in ALGOL 68C.
- Flex machine - The hardware was custom and microprogrammable, with an operating system, (modular) compiler, editor, * garbage collector and filing system all written in ALGOL 68.
- HYDRA - Running on the C.mmp computer at Carnegie Mellon University, implemented in the programming language BLISS.[5]
- KeyKOS nanokernel
- EROS microkernel
- CapROS EROS successor
- Coyotos EROS successor, goal: be first formally verified OS
- EROS microkernel
- V from Stanford, early 1980s[1]
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