Or shrink the operating system by removing the less important features. The
basic function of the operating system is to allow you to load, run, and
stop programs.

The UNIVAC 1219 operating system was 32 18-bit words hard wired into core
memory. It read a paper tape into a fixed block of memory and executed it.
Typically this would be a loader routine for the rest of the tape. I'm not
aware of anything smaller than that.

On Mon, Nov 30, 2020, 10:35 AM James Bowery <[email protected]> wrote:

> The paper Characterizing the Software Development Process: A New Approach
> Based on Kolmogorov Complexity
> <https://www.academia.edu/10454331/Characterizing_the_Software_Development_Process_A_New_Approach_Based_on_Kolmogorov_Complexity>
>  falls
> short of the suggestion I made to a college friend of mine who took over
> the chief architect position from Gates:
>
> Take a little bit of the mountain of monopoly money sitting around -- say
> only a billion or two -- and turn it into a prize for the internal team
> that can produce the smallest bootable image that expands into an
> implementation of the complete software suite:  OS, Office, etc. that
> passes the QA testing.
>
>
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