Compatible Timesharing System - significado y definición. Qué es Compatible Timesharing System
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Qué (quién) es Compatible Timesharing System - definición

TIME-SHARING OPERATING SYSTEM
Dartmouth timesharing system; Dartmouth Time-Sharing System
  • DTSS hardware schematic, October 1964
  • Kiewit Network, early 1971
  • Honeywell GE 635 Computer Hardware architecture at Kiewit, early 1971
  • GE-235 We Sing Thy Praises

Compatible Timesharing System      
<operating system> (CTSS) One of the earliest (1963) experiments in the design of interactive time-sharing operating systems. CTSS was ancestral to Multics, Unix, and ITS. It was developed at the MIT Computation Center by a team led by Fernando J. Corbato. CTSS ran on a modified IBM 7094 with a second 32K-word bank of memory, using two 2301 drums for swapping. Remote access was provided to up to 30 users via an IBM 7750 communications controller connected to dial-up modems. The name ITS (Incompatible time-sharing System) was a hack on CTSS, meant both as a joke and to express some basic differences in philosophy about the way I/O services should be presented to user programs. (1997-01-29)
Compatible ink         
MANUFACTURED BY THIRD PARTY MANUFACTURERS
Compatible ink cartridges
Compatible ink (or compatible toner) is manufactured by third party manufacturers and is designed to work in designated printers without infringing on patents of printer manufacturers. Compatible inks and toners may come in a variety of packaging including sealed plastic wraps or taped plastic wraps.
Human Compatible         
2019 BOOK BY STUART J. RUSSELL
Human compatible AI and the problem of control; Human Compatible: Artificial Intelligence and the Problem of Control
Human Compatible: Artificial Intelligence and the Problem of Control is a 2019 non-fiction book by computer scientist Stuart J. Russell.

Wikipedia

Dartmouth Time Sharing System

The Dartmouth Time-Sharing System (DTSS) is a discontinued operating system first developed at Dartmouth College between 1963 and 1964. It was the first successful large-scale time-sharing system to be implemented, and was also the system for which the BASIC language was developed. DTSS was developed continually over the next decade, reimplemented on several generations of computers, and finally shut down in 1999.

General Electric developed a similar system based on an interim version of DTSS, which they referred to as Mark II. Mark II and the further developed Mark III was widely used on their GE-600 series mainframe computers and formed the basis for their online services. These were the largest such services in the world for a time, eventually emerging as the consumer-oriented GEnie online service.