Universal Time-Sharing System

Description

The Universal Time-Sharing System (UTS) was an operating system for the XDS Sigma line of computers, succeeding BTM/BPM. UTS was announced in 1966, but because of delays did not actually ship until 1971. It was designed to provide multi-programming services for online (interactive) user programs in addition to batch-mode production jobs, symbiont (spooled) I/O, and critical real-time processes. System Daemons, called "ghost jobs" were used to run monitor code in user space. The final release, D00, shipped in January, 1973. It was succeeded by the CP-V operating system, which combined UTS with the heavily batch-oriented XOS.

Year First Manufactured
1966

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