Principles of Operating Systems: Design & Applications

Front Cover
Course Technology, 2008 - Computers - 580 pages
Principles of Operating Systems: Design and Applications is an ideal resource for anyone who wants to gain a basic understanding of operating systems in the context of the applications in which they are used. The main focus of this text is to foster an understanding of operating system fundamentals: what types of services they provide, how various applications interface with them, and the restrictions they have on those applications. Making this book unique in its approach is the inclusion of a wide range of example systems and detailed case studies of the Linux and Inferno operating systems. By combining a traditional set of topics with this real-life contextual background, readers will achieve an enriched understanding of the material, which they can immediately apply to the world of operating systems.

About the author (2008)

Brian Stuart is an Adjunct Professor at the University of Memphis. Previously, he taught at Rhodes College and has worked in the telecommunications, automotive electronics and wireless telemetry industries. His consulting activities have ranged from medical instrumentation to agriculture. Dr. Stuart received his BS degree from the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, his MS from the University of Notre Dame and his PhD from Purdue University.

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