Most Imp.......
   
  1)Free From Virus....
  2) Free Of Charge..........
   
  Y Linux Safe...
  ===========
  
multitasking: several programs running at the same time.   
multiuser: several users on the same machine at the same time (and no two-user 
licenses!).   
multiplatform: runs on many different CPUs, not just Intel.   
multiprocessor: SMP support is available on the Intel and SPARC platforms (with 
work currently in progress on other platforms), and Linux is used in several 
loosely-coupled MP applications, including Beowulf systems (see 
http://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/linux-web/beowulf/beowulf.html) and the Fujitsu 
AP1000+ SPARC-based supercomputer.   
multithreading: has native kernel support for multiple independent threads of 
control within a single process memory space.   
runs in protected mode on the 386.   
has memory protection between processes, so that one program can't bring the 
whole system down.   
demand loads executables: Linux only reads from disk those parts of a program 
that are actually used.   
shared copy-on-write pages among executables. This means that multiple process 
can use the same memory to run in. When one tries to write to that memory, that 
page (4KB piece of memory) is copied somewhere else. Copy-on-write has two 
benefits: increasing speed and decreasing memory use.   
virtual memory using paging (not swapping whole processes) to disk: to a 
separate partition or a file in the filesystem, or both, with the possibility 
of adding more swapping areas during runtime (yes, they're still called 
swapping areas). A total of 16 of these 128 MB (2GB in recent kernels) swapping 
areas can be used at the same time, for a theoretical total of 2 GB of useable 
swap space. It is simple to increase this if necessary, by changing a few lines 
of source code.   
a unified memory pool for user programs and disk cache, so that all free memory 
can be used for caching, and the cache can be reduced when running large 
programs.   
dynamically linked shared libraries (DLL's), and static libraries too, of 
course.   
does core dumps for post-mortem analysis, allowing the use of a debugger on a 
program not only while it is running but also after it has crashed.   
mostly compatible with POSIX, System V, and BSD at the source level.   
through an iBCS2-compliant emulation module, mostly compatible with SCO, SVR3, 
and SVR4 at the binary level.   
all source code is available, including the whole kernel and all drivers, the 
development tools and all user programs; also, all of it is freely 
distributable. Plenty of commercial programs are being provided for Linux 
without source, but everything that has been free, including the entire base 
operating system, is still free.   
POSIX job control.   
pseudoterminals (pty's).   
387-emulation in the kernel so that programs don't need to do their own math 
emulation. Every computer running Linux appears to have a math coprocessor. Of 
course, if your computer already contains an FPU, it will be used instead of 
the emulation, and you can even compile your own kernel with math emulation 
removed, for a small memory gain.   
support for many national or customized keyboards, and it is fairly easy to add 
new ones dynamically.   
multiple virtual consoles: several independent login sessions through the 
console, you switch by pressing a hot-key combination (not dependent on video 
hardware). These are dynamically allocated; you can use up to 64.   
Supports several common filesystems, including minix, Xenix, and all the common 
system V filesystems, and has an advanced filesystem of its own, which offers 
filesystems of up to 4 TB, and names up to 255 characters long.   
transparent access to MS-DOS partitions (or OS/2 FAT partitions) via a special 
filesystem: you don't need any special commands to use the MS-DOS partition, it 
looks just like a normal Unix filesystem (except for funny restrictions on 
filenames, permissions, and so on). MS-DOS 6 compressed partitions do not work 
at this time without a patch (dmsdosfs). VFAT (WNT, Windows 95) support and 
FAT-32 is available in Linux 2.0   
special filesystem called UMSDOS which allows Linux to be installed on a DOS 
filesystem.   
read-only HPFS-2 support for OS/2 2.1   
HFS (Macintosh) file system support is available separately as a module.   
CD-ROM filesystem which reads all standard formats of CD-ROMs.   
TCP/IP networking, including ftp, telnet, NFS, etc.   
Appletalk server   
Netware client and server   
Lan Manager/Windows Native (SMB) client and server   
Many networking protocols: the base protocols available in the latest 
development kernels include TCP, IPv4, IPv6, AX.25, X.25, IPX, DDP (Appletalk), 
Netrom, and others. Stable network protocols included in the stable kernels 
currently include TCP, IPv4, IPX, DDP, and AX.25. 

Dinesh Jadhav
  9867011640
   [input] 
    "Do not worry about anything; instead 
PRAY ABOUT EVERYTHING." 
Philippians 4:6


       
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