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Kenneth Cutts Richard Cabot Arnold (born 1958) is an American computer programmer well known as one of the developers of the 1980s dungeon-crawling video game Rogue, [1] for his contributions to the original Berkeley distribution of Unix, for his books and articles about C and C++ (e.g. his 1980s–1990s Unix Review column, "The C Advisor"), and his high-profile work on the Java platform.
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BSD is the Berkeley Software Distribution, a free Unix-like operating system, and numerous variants. BSD may also refer to: Science, technology, and mathematics
The two began to write a new operating system called Filer OS based on Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD), which was to be used with Fastora NAS hardware to create a NAS solution. To integrate their NAS software tightly with hardware, Synology released its first complete solution in 2004, the DiskStation DS-101.
Prof. Bob Fabry should be added to the BSD history on this page. Peter Salus has some info on him in A Quarter Century of UNIX. Fabry secured the grants that allowed Unix development to occur at Berkeley, and supervised it. He had the vision that UCB could make a big difference in Unix. He was responsible for getting Bill Joy involved.
Unix history tree AT&T System V license plate UNIX System V Release 1 on SIMH (PDP-11). System V was the successor to 1982's UNIX System III.While AT&T developed and sold hardware that ran System V, most customers ran a version from a reseller, based on AT&T's reference implementation.
Simplified evolution of Unix systems. The Mach kernel was a fork from BSD 4.3 that led to NeXTSTEP / OpenStep, upon which macOS and iOS are based.. The Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) was a research group at the University of California, Berkeley that was dedicated to enhancing AT&T Unix operating system and funded by Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
PyTorch is a machine learning library based on the Torch library, [4] [5] [6] used for applications such as computer vision and natural language processing, [7] originally developed by Meta AI and now part of the Linux Foundation umbrella.