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SHARE Operating System

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SHARE Operating System
DeveloperSHARE user group
Working stateDiscontinued
Initial release1959; 66 years ago (1959)
Available inEnglish
Supported platformsIBM 704, IBM 709

The SHARE Operating System (SOS) was created in 1959 as an improvement on the General Motors GM-NAA I/O operating system, the first operating system, by the SHARE user group. The main target was to improve the sharing of programs over GM-NAA I/O.

SHARE Operating System provided new methods to manage buffers and input/output devices, and, like GM-NAA I/O, allowed execution of programs written in assembly language.

Initially, it worked on IBM 709 computer and its transistorized compatible successor the IBM 7090.

A series of articles describing innovations in the system[1] appears in the April, 1959, Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery.

In 1962, IBM discontinued support for SOS and announced an entirely new (and incompatible) operating system IBM 7090/94 IBSYS.

See also

References