Xerox Operating System
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XOS was an operating system for the XDS Sigma series of computers "optimized for direct replacement of IBM DOS/360 installations" and to provide real-time and timesharing support.[1]
XOS was developed, beginning in 1969, for Xerox by the French firm CII (now Bull).[2]
XOS was more successful in Europe than in the US, but was unable to compete with IBM. By 1972 there were 35 XOS installations in Europe, compared to 2 in the US.[1]
Notes
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References
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External links
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "XOS Fact Sheet, 1972"
- ↑ Strassmann, Paul A. (2008), The Computers Nobody Wanted: My Years with Xerox. Information Economics Press.