IS1060 Introduction to information systems
54
When many programs are running simultaneously in a computer, it does,
of course, complicate all the other management tasks. Memory must be
carefully shared between programs; input needs to be directed to the right
program and output devices such as printers need careful management
too. As you will gather from the above description, operating systems
are complicated items of software. As hardware gets more powerful and
users expect more, operating software gets more complex too, and today
an operating system for a microcomputer or a mobile phone is a very
substantial and sophisticated piece of software.
Activity
Pull up the task manager window on a windows-based PC when it is running (for
example, press CTL-Alt-Del all at the same time).
Take a look at the Applications tab to see what ‘user applications’ are running. Then look
at the Processes tab, and see how many actual bits of software (modules or processes)
are running on the machine. A process is roughly equivalent to a separate program and
in this case will include many separate parts of the operating system software as well as
‘applications’.
Then click the Performance tab and see how much physical memory the computer has,
how much main memory is in use and how much of the CPU power is being used. The
graphs you see will show this for the recent past. Try loading a couple of other data-heavy
or processor heavy programs such as a computer game or a big spreadsheet and see if
these figures change.
Dostları ilə paylaş: