What operating system is used on the space station?

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  • Dave A
    Site Caretaker

    • May 2006
    • 22810

    #1

    What operating system is used on the space station?

    Reading an article about a computer failure on the space station, I could not help but wonder - What OS are they using?
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  • Snoopy_inc
    Silver Member

    • Aug 2006
    • 222

    #2
    Predesigned systems... They dont work off of windows or such.... if i remember correctly they have something called cobol or something.
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    • Dave A
      Site Caretaker

      • May 2006
      • 22810

      #3
      Now that's sweet. The old stuff - tried, tested and by modern standards, simple and robust.

      Anyway, apparently the affected computers are reluctant to reboot just at the mo'.
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      • RKS Computer Solutions
        Email problem

        • Apr 2007
        • 626

        #4
        Originally posted by Dave A
        Now that's sweet. The old stuff - tried, tested and by modern standards, simple and robust.

        Anyway, apparently the affected computers are reluctant to reboot just at the mo'.
        Sounds like Micro$soft allright...

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        • Dave A
          Site Caretaker

          • May 2006
          • 22810

          #5
          Somehow, I've got a sneaking suspicion the OS might not be M$, even if it was behaving like M$ for a moment there.

          I believe the crisis is now over. I didn't see how exatly, but the last talk was about a new solar panel array that might be affecting the computer power supply.
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          • Snoopy_inc
            Silver Member

            • Aug 2006
            • 222

            #6
            Well, As far as i was concerned NASA had os's before M$ was around... therefor they have their own system developers etc for what they doing.
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            • SilverNodashi
              Platinum Member

              • May 2007
              • 1197

              #7
              Most OS's come from UNIX, one way or another. UNIX being the first OS every to be written to be portable no the ANCIENT computers, unlike the Personal Computers we know today.

              Cobol, on the other hand is a programming language
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              • vieome
                Email problem

                • Apr 2012
                • 540

                #8

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                • Dave A
                  Site Caretaker

                  • May 2006
                  • 22810

                  #9
                  64MB RAM ...

                  How far we've come since!
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                  Alcocks Electrical Services | Alcocks Pest Control & Entomological Services | Alcocks Hygiene Services

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                  • jeccyka
                    Email problem

                    • Jun 2012
                    • 70

                    #10
                    Originally posted by SoftDux-Rudi
                    Most OS's come from UNIX, one way or another. UNIX being the first OS every to be written to be portable no the ANCIENT computers, unlike the Personal Computers we know today.

                    Cobol, on the other hand is a programming language
                    I have never seen UNIX, but heard of something about it. Unix is the leader in serving the Web. About 90% of the Internet relies on Unix operating systems running on Apache, the world’s most widely used Web server, which is free.

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                    • kailashseo368
                      Junior Member
                      • Feb 2013
                      • 16

                      #11
                      Lots of systems use and run on Windows in industry. It's just that, for many applications, it's overkill and overly complicated. That's why most "computers" like ATMs and the like run on very basic Linux-esque operating systems that are purpose-driven.

                      As for what operating system a space station uses, I doubt there's just one running the entire thing.

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                      • Justloadit
                        Diamond Member

                        • Nov 2010
                        • 3518

                        #12
                        I am sure it is Window-less
                        Victor - Knowledge is a blessing or a curse, your current circumstances make you decide!
                        Solar pumping, Solar Geyser & Solar Security lighting solutions - www.microsolve.co.za

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                        • irneb
                          Gold Member

                          • Apr 2007
                          • 625

                          #13
                          Also don't believe they have only one. Usually redundancy is foremost with those guys. Especially after certain "incidents" in the past few decades Obviously the OS isn't all that could go wrong. It's just the base system which allows other software to run. It's used so that all the software needed can be made to work together and/or concurrently without needing to know everything about each other and the hardware on which it's installed. The OS is more like the points-man directing traffic than the road on which the software runs. So while the OS has a great influence over robustness, it's not the only thing which could go wrong. And as has been stated, this particular problem seems to have stemmed from a hardware issue.

                          As for "Unix" being the ancestor of all OS's. That's partly true for "most" current OS's. The thing to remember is there's not just one Unix (at least not since the 70's). Each company making their own flavour of Unix, even Microsoft had a go when they fiddled with Xennix. Though the Microsoft OS's (since DOS, through Win9x) have mostly been derived from CP/M originally, not a Unix by a long shot. The WinNT-esque (i.e. 2000/XP/Vista/7/8) was actually derived from IMB's OS/2, which was also not a Unix - though it implemented much the same ideas as Unix already had.

                          But nearly everything else is using some form of Unix or Unix-like OS. Chances are that every reasonably complex electronic device you own has a unix-like operating system in it. The Unix family is rather "huge", spanning from large banking servers from someone such as Oracle, down to the Linux in your DVD player or the OS in your phone. Even Apple's OSX/iOS is based on BSD (a derivative of Unix). Linux is not strictly an offshoot of Unix, it was designed seperately, though I cannot see that the creator (Linus Torvalds) didn't at least use Unix as a measuring aim.

                          So these days, of the major consumer OS's left - the only true Unix-child would be Apple's OXS/iOS. Since it can trace its roots back through BSD. But both Linux and Windows have a slight break in that they didn't take a Unix and built onto it, but rather re-invented the same ideas. Of course that doesn't mean unix is only alive on Macs. Nearly all routers or NAS boxes use BSD or similar, the rest use Linux. And as stated before large scale servers tend to be Unix, web servers seem to be Linux mostly. Minor servers (like domain / file servers) seem to be split between Linux / Windows.

                          But what users tend to "see" is not the OS itself, but the Desktop Environment. E.g. Linux has a whole splattering of Desktop Environments (Gnome / KDE / XFCE / Unity / etc.) - which are mostly also available to the Unixes out there. OSX adds its own environment onto BSD (which is the major difference between OSX & BSD, though not the only one). Windows tends to have only the one, though updated a bit through the years.
                          Gold is the money of kings; silver is the money of gentlemen; barter is the money of peasants; but debt is the money of slaves. - Norm Franz
                          And central banks are the slave clearing houses

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                          • adrianh
                            Diamond Member

                            • Mar 2010
                            • 6328

                            #14
                            That's why most "computers" like ATMs and the like run on very basic Linux-esque operating systems that are purpose-driven.
                            Maybe in your country, I've seen a couple of Windows - "Blue Screen" ATMs in South Africa

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                            • Mitos
                              Email problem
                              • Feb 2013
                              • 40

                              #15
                              One of the largest purchasers of our rack mounted systems are in aviation ; http://www.aeroinst.com/ServiceDepar...ATEEngineering
                              They use them to extract flight information from their aircraft via RS422/RS232 for flight analysis, pilot skills evaluation & correction or further fine tuning. It is similar to but not the Black Box however. The entire apparatus is operated by a series of pre-programmed eprom chips. I suspect similar in any high speed aircraft.
                              www.mitos.co.za

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