lets you easily share a single mouse and keyboard between multiple computers with different operating systems, each with its own display, without special hardware. It's intended for users with multiple computers on their desk.
The UWIN package allows UNIX applications to be built and run on Windows XP/2000/NT/ME/98/95 with few, if any, changes necessary. UWIN source and binaries are available under the open source Common Public License 1.0.
If your windows installation has issues, or for some other unmentionable reason is unable to get updates from the windows server, this is what you need to do.
Learn how you can use Virtual Server 2005 R2, now available as a free download, to increase hardware utilization and enable faster deployments of new servers.
The obvious question is: should you be considering a move to 64-bit Windows? In this article, we will explore the answer to this question. We will discuss the advantages of 64-bit Windows over 32-bit, talk about a few concepts, and get some tips...
a simple and failsafe way to create complete virtual machines for VMware Player on the web. Install any Windows, Linux, BSD or Solaris, and test live-CDs in a safe environment.
You'll find plain-English information here about using Linux on a personal computer or on a shell account provided by your ISP. After a brief history and overview of Linux, you'll find a concise and occasionally light-hearted treatment of these topics.
Parallel I/O continues to be a topic of active development. Recent years have seen the creation of many new options. Even with these new choices, certain factors remain constant. Parallel applications need a fast I/O subsystem.
a free NAS (Network-Attached Storage) server, supporting: CIFS (samba), FTP, NFS, RSYNC protocols, local user authentication, Software RAID (0,1,5) with a Full WEB configuration interface. FreeNAS takes less than 32MB...
designed to be used by Unix distribution developers, package developers, and system implementors. Intended to be a reference, not a tutorial on how to manage a Unix filesystem or directory hierarchy.
powerful x86 virtualization (similar to VMWare) runs on Windows, Linux, Macintosh and OpenSolaris hosts and supports a large number of guest operating systems including but not limited to Windows (NT 4.0, 2000, XP, Server 2003, Vista), DOS/Windows 3.x, Linux (2.4 and 2.6), Solaris and OpenSolaris, and OpenBSD.
explores a novel interface to a system administration task. Instead of creating an interface de novo for the task, the author modified a popular computer game, Doom, to perform useful work.
a collection of utilities and technical information related to Windows internals by Mark Russinovich and Bryce Cogswell. Microsoft acquired Sysinternals in July, 2006.
Need a boot disk for your Windows machine? There are essentially seven steps to create a bootable DVD or bootable UFD (USB Flash Drive), all of which are command line based, this article tries to simplify all the information needed
aims to implement functions (not present on Windows 98 / ME) to kernel32.dll and other system libraries so that recent Windows XP applications and games work on Windows 98 / ME. (requires Windows 98 FE or Windows 98 SE or Windows ME)
Having only the services you need running will make your system faster, more stable and secure. So the first thing you need to do after installing a Linux distribution is to manually edit the list of enabled services.
implements Windows kernel API and NDIS API within Linux kernel. A Windows driver for wireless network card is then linked to this implementation so that the driver runs natively, as though it is in Windows, without binary emulation.
This document explores methods for squeezing excess bytes out of simple programs. (Of course, the more practical purpose of this document is to describe a few of the inner workings of the ELF file format and the Linux operating system. But hopefully you can also learn something about how to make really teensy ELF executables in the process.)
on these pages you will find many screen shots of various desktop computer Graphical User Interfaces and operating systems. Many different people have had different ideas of how a GUI should work and these screen shots show many of the more popular ones.
a lightweight, efficient and flexible desktop operating system, designed to help you make the most of your computer. It's an independent, portable and free project, aiming at being compatible with AmigaOS at the API level (like Wine, unlike UAE),
a Linux distribution that is about 100 megabytes, yet it includes a complete set of graphical applications, combined with extensive utility applications. Puppy was created from scratch, file-by-file, optimized for size at every step. Another feature of Puppy Linux is that it can work totally without a hard drive, even allowing you to save data and install extra packages by saving back to the CD or DVD.
House updated to 6.8.2 I've been hacking on House for the last year or so. My primary work is two-fold: to integrate Peng Li's work on Lightweight Concurrency, and to build a priority-based scheduler atop the framework. In order to do that, I also had to update House to run on GHC 6.8.2. Thanks are due to my advisor, Andrew Tolmach for incredible help and direction, to Adam Wick for help porting House to GHC 6.8.2, to Peng Li for supplying a snapshot of his lightweight concurrency code, and to Simon Marlow for his amazing help with some tricky RTS issues.
A. Fattori, R. Paleari, L. Martignoni, and M. Monga. Proceedings of the 25th IEEE/ACM International
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2010), page 417--426. Antwerp, Belgium, ACM, (September 2010)
K. Murata, R. Horspool, E. Manning, Y. Yokote, and M. Tokoro. Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Object-Orientation in Operating Systems, page 68--71. Washington, DC, USA, IEEE Computer Society, (1995)