Anbieter: Reader's Corner, Inc., Raleigh, NC, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Good. 1st Edition. With previous owner's name, otherwise a fine, unmarked, hardcover first edition copy, in a good mylar protected DJ, white spine. 120 pages with index. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 105578
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Crappy Old Books, Barry, Vereinigtes Königreich
Hardback. Zustand: Good. Introduction to Operating Systems (1971) by A. J. T. Colin is a charmingly understated title for a subject that is, in reality, the invisible stage manager of modern life. Operating systems are the reason anything works at all, yet they rarely get applause. They just stand in the wings, shuffling tasks, managing memory, and quietly preventing everything from collapsing into chaos ? a bit like a competent civil servant, but with fewer tea breaks and more interrupts. And this is 1971 , when ?operating system? didn?t mean a colourful interface and a friendly app store. It meant big machines, serious institutions, and the thrilling possibility that your expensive computer might be persuaded to do more than one thing without having a nervous breakdown. This is the era of batch jobs, time-sharing, job control, scheduling, spooling, and the sort of concepts that sound dry until you realise they?re basically the rules that stop a computer from turning into a very fast paperweight. Colin?s approach is wonderfully of its time: methodical, clear, and quietly confident that the reader is capable of learning difficult things without being emotionally coddled. There are no ?quick wins? here. No motivational graphics. No friendly mascots. Just proper explanations, likely accompanied by diagrams that look like they were drawn with a ruler and a firm belief in correctness. The real joy is that this book captures the moment when computing was transitioning from ?one program, one machine, one job? into something more ambitious ? systems that could share resources, keep order, and serve multiple users without collapsing into a queue of despair. In other words, it?s about teaching the computer to behave like a well-run building rather than a single-use workshop. And yes, there?s something deliciously ironic about reading a 1971 operating systems textbook now, in a world where your phone is running an OS capable of doing roughly everything except making you feel calm. Back then, the grand challenge was allocating memory. Today, the grand challenge is stopping your operating system from politely suggesting you ?try a mindfulness app? while it updates itself in the background. Condition (Good, and proudly functional) This copy is in Good condition ? the ideal state for a book about systems doing their job properly. It presents well, holds together firmly, and has clearly survived the decades without being used as a doorstop for a server room. If it has any signs of age, they?re the honest kind: a bit of mellowing, a bit of history, but still solid, readable, and ready for another round of education. Why you want it Because it?s vintage computing with real substance. This isn?t nostalgia for blinking lights ? it?s the intellectual infrastructure that made modern computing possible. It?s also a brilliant artefact for anyone who enjoys the deep mechanics of how machines are organised, controlled, and prevented from fighting over resources like toddlers in a toy shop. Perfect for: collectors of classic computing texts operating-systems nerds and students who like seeing the foundations programmers who enjoy the archaeology of ?how we got here? anyone who suspects the world is run by scheduling, queues, and polite rules Crappy Old Books offers it as a clean, sturdy survivor from the age of mainframes and disciplined prose ? a 1971 guide to the unseen system that keeps the whole machine from falling apart. Which, frankly, is also what we all want. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 5810
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