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Graphical User Interface

Most modern computer systems contain Graphical User Interfaces. In some computer systems the GUI is integrated into the kernel—for example, in the original implementations of Microsoft Windows and Mac OS, the graphical subsystem was actually part of the kernel. Other operating systems, some older ones and some modern ones, are modular, separating the graphics subsystem from the kernel and the Operating System. In the 1980's UNIX, VMS and many others had operating systems that were built this way. Today Linux, and Mac OS X are also built this way.


Many computer operating systems allow the user to install or create any user interface they desire. The X Window System in conjunction with GNOME or KDE is a commonly found setup on most Unix and Unix-like (BSD, Linux, Minix) systems. Numerous Unix-based GUIs have existed over time, most derived from X11. Competition among the various vendors of Unix (HP, IBM, Sun) led to much fragmentation, though an effort to standardize in the 1990s to COSE and CDE failed for the most part due to various reasons, eventually eclipsed by the widespread adoption of GNOME and KDE. Prior to open source-based toolkits and desktop environments, Motif was the prevalent toolkit/desktop combination (and was the basis upon which CDE was developed).


Graphical user interfaces evolve over time. For example, Windows has modified its user interface almost every time a new major version of Windows is released, and the Mac OS GUI changed dramatically with the introduction of Mac OS X in 2001.

Please follow these links for details on other tasks performed by Operating System:
Memory Management
Process Management
Disk and File Management
Networking
Security
Graphical User Interface
Device Driver Management

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