On Nov 3, 3:46 pm, "Charlie Gibbs" <cgi...@kltpzyxm.invalid> wrote:
> As for OS/360, that's a totally different can of worms...
The very early versions of OS/360 were horrible, as the histories and
authors will say. It was also ahead of its time, trying to do too
much too soon.
But later data centers had machines with large memories and many
peripherals. Such machines were used to handle multi-programming,
Keeping multiple application programs from encroaching upon each
other, working efficiently with memory, and handling tape mounts,
printer forms, disk mounts, and other special devices all took a
sophisticated operating system.
From reading the histories, I get the impression some customers were
still very anxious to get their System/360 even before the operating
system was even ready, and certainly well before the bugs were worked
out. I believe some early customers got a special quick & dirty
version just to get them going.
In my humble opinion, many of System/360's hardware and software
development problems were the result of Tom Watson Jr's arbitrarily
(his words) split of the business into two divisions (GPD and DPD)
based on machine size. There was an enormous rivalry and lack of
cooperation between Poughkeepsie and Endicott which I think could've
been avoided or at least toned down by better management than Watson
Jr offered.
Also, S/360 was a worldwide effort. The logistical capability to keep
"everyone on the same page" was rather limited in the early 1960s.