|
Web operating system and webOS are metacomputing terms that refer to network services for Internet scale distributed computing, as in the WebOS Project at UC Berkeley,〔(【引用サイトリンク】 WebOS: Operating System Services for Wide Area Applications )〕 and the WOS Project.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Towards a Web Operating System )〕 In both cases, the scale of the "web operating system" extends across the Internet, like the web. However, the terms webOS and web operating system have been employed more broadly and with far greater popularity in the context of ''"the web as in HTTP"'', and for many meanings ranging from singular systems to collections of systems.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 What is a WebOS? )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Open Source Web Desktop Environment, commonly known as Web Operating System (Web OS) or Web Office )〕〔 (【引用サイトリンク】 What the heck is a web operating system? )〕 In April 2002, Tim O'Reilly spoke of "the emergent Internet operating system" as an open collection of Web services.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Inventing the Future )〕 Common to uses for collections of systems, a web operating system is distinct from Internet operating systems in that it is independent of the traditional individual computer operating system. This conception of the ''system'' reflects an evolution of research in the field of operating systems into the increasingly minimized (for example, TinyOS and Exokernel) and distributed (for example, Inferno), and for distributed systems increasingly defined in terms of the specification of their network protocols more than their implementations (for example, Plan9's 9P). In a usage referring to singular network services, a web operating system is another name for a Webtop. These services turn the desktop into a service that runs on the Internet〔 〕 rather than on the local computer. As these services include a file system and application management system, they increasingly overlap with the functionality of a traditional desktop computer operating system. In a usage referring to desktop (or handheld) computer application environments, a web operating system is a traditional operating system that is focused on supporting Web applications themselves, or a desktop operating system solely providing Web access.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Webconverger )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】 cl33n )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】 LiveKiosk )〕 Systems like these also are known as kiosks. ==History== The first webOS and web-based desktop environment was invented by Sandro Pasquali〔(sandro-pasquali (Sandro Pasquali) · GitHub ). Github.com (2011-03-08). Retrieved on 2013-06-14.〕 in 1998, with patents filed in January 1999.〔(United States Patent: 6272493 ). Patft.uspto.gov. Retrieved on 2013-06-14.〕 Pasquali's invention of an online desktop environment led to the foundation of Simple.com〔(SIMPLE.COM - Reviews & Brand Information - Tilga, Ms. Carolyn Santa Fe , - Serial Number: 75595206 ). Trademarkia.com. Retrieved on 2013-06-14.〕 (whose domain was recently sold to an online bank〔(BankSimple Acquires & Changes Its Name to Simple.com ). TheDomains.com. Retrieved on 2013-06-14.〕), which offered a complete online enterprise solution for the creation of online services within a desktop environment ((Simple.com demo sample )), and of InternetOne,〔(INTERNET ONE - Reviews & Brand Information - Wired Solutions, LLC. Santa Fe, NM - Serial Number: 75687702 ). Trademarkia.com. Retrieved on 2013-06-14.〕 which sold the core webOS technology invention. Simple.com was involved in several lawsuits involving its webOS invention, notably with Computer Associates〔(CA Inc. wins software patent lawsuit ). Newsday.com (2009-09-11). Retrieved on 2013-06-14.〕 and with McAfee and Associates〔(PR Newswire UK: Simple.com Inc. files lawsuit against McAfee.com Inc. alleging copying of proprietary web technology ). Prnewswire.co.uk (2000-03-22). Retrieved on 2013-06-14.〕 WebOS gained popularity in 1999 when a much touted start up, WebOS Inc. (at first known as HyperOffice and later known as MyWebOS), was founded by Berkeley grad Shervin Pishevar and Emory grad Drew Morris. WebOS licensed the webOS technologies from Duke University and University of Texas at Austin and recruited Dr. Amin Vahdat, Professor of Computer Science at Duke, who had pioneered the webOS technologies at University of California at Berkeley where he got his PhD on his webOS research. WebOS acquired WebOS.org, which was created by a young Swedish programmer, Fredrik Malmer. Soon after, some of the top DHTML and JavaScript programmers in the world such as Erik Arvidsson of WebFx fame, Dan Steinman, creator of the Dynamic Duo Cross-browser DHTML API, joined WebOS. WebOS raised over $10 million in financing from Impact Venture Partners led by Adam Dell and Grotech Capital. WebOS was launched with a vision of creating the first web operating system complete with a webOS API allowing developers to create Windows-like web applications that worked at extremely fast speeds by caching much of the code in the local browser. Arvidsson later launched Bindows, a framework very similar to the WebOS API, that does much of this and is used by many large companies and the US Military. WebOS competed with another start up, Desktop.com, which was aimed more at the consumer market. WebOS was covered by many media outlets such as the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, LA Times, Power Lunch on CNBC, Fox News and CNN and helped spread the WebOS meme further. WebOS launched Hyperoffice, a full office suite, back in 1999. A 2003 scientific publication was made about BolinOS, a "Web Operating System for Internet / Radiology" based on works started in 1995 by the University of Geneva in Switzerland, and relates the diverse aspects of this kind of online platform, based on client and server side distribution of applications using platform independent software. The technology was adopted by Palm and released as Palm webOS in 2009. In 2010, Palm was acquired by Hewlett Packard and the technology was further developed into Open webOS. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「web operating system」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|