Here are some amazing cool facts about the Linux Operating system which
was created by Linus Torvalds. Linux is gaining more attention
nowadays. Linux is virus free , more stable than windows. Let us see the
facts that you never heard of.
9. Linux powers a majority of the world’s supercomputers
Linux
was originally developed as a free operating system for Intel x86-based
personal computers. It has since been ported to more computer hardware
platforms than any other operating system. It is a leading operating
system on servers and other big iron systems such as mainframe computers
and supercomputers. More than 90 percent of today’s 500 fastest
supercomputers run some variant of Linux, including the 10 fastest.
Linux also runs on embedded systems, devices where the operating system
is typically built into the firmware and highly tailored to the system,
such as mobile phones, tablet computers, network routers, building
automation controls, televisions and video game consoles.
8. Linux runs Japanese high speed rail
The
Shinkansen, also known as the “Bullet Train”, is a network of
high-speed railway lines in Japan operated by four Japan Railways Group
companies. The train reaches the maximum speeds of 240–320 km/h. The
Shinkansen employs an ATC (Automatic Train Control) system, eliminating
the need for trackside signals. It uses a comprehensive system of
Automatic Train Protection. Centralized traffic control manages all
train operations, and all tasks relating to train movement, track,
station and schedule are networked and computerized. Most of these
systems are based on Linux.
7. It supports high-tech traffic control
Linux’s
traffic control functionality offers a lot of capabilities related to
influencing the rate of flow, as well as latency, of primarily outgoing
but also in some cases incoming network traffic. It is designed to be a
“construction kit” rather than a turn-key system, where complex network
traffic policing and shaping decisions can be made using a variety of
algorithms, as reported by Funtoo. San Francisco recently started using
traffic controllers that are powered by Linux.
6. Toyota’s “In-Vehicle-Infotainment” and communications systems run Linux
According
to Webopedia, the In-Vehicle-infotainment (IVI) systems are used in
automobiles that deliver entertainment and information content. While
each IVI system is different, typical tasks that can be performed with
an in-vehicle infotainment system include managing and playing audio
content, utilizing navigation for driving, delivering rear-seat
entertainment such as movies, games, social networking, listening to
incoming and sending outgoing SMS text messages, making phone calls, and
accessing Internet-enabled or smartphone-enabled content such as
traffic conditions, sports scores and weather forecasts.
Currently, Toyota is using Linux as the base platform to develop IVI technologies for its automobiles.
5. The New York Stock Exchange is powered by Linux
When
it comes to the fast-moving business of trading stocks, bonds and
derivatives, the world’s financial exchanges are finding an ally in
Linux, PC world reports. “As an alternative to traditional Unix, Linux
has become a dominant player in finance, thanks to the operating-system
kernel’s ability to pass messages very quickly,” Linux kernel
contributor Christoph Lameter, said in an interview with IDG.
The
largest exchange, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Euronext, is run
on a Linux system that can generate 1,500,000 quotes and process 250,000
orders every second, offering acknowledgments of each transaction
within two milliseconds.
4. Linux is helping power particle physics research
CERN,
the world’s largest particle physics laboratory, relies upon Linux to
control its huge particle accelerator. It uses Scientific Linux (SL),
which is a Linux distribution produced by Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory and the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN). It
is a free and open source operating system based on Red Hat Enterprise
Linux and aims to be “as close to the commercial enterprise distribution
as we can get it.”
3. Air traffic control systems use Linux to get you from A to B safely
U.S.
has ported its FAA’s (Federal Aviation Administration) Common ARTS
software to Linux. Common ARTS (or Automated Radar Terminal System) is
an air traffic control computer system that air traffic controllers use
to track aircraft.The computer system is used to automate the air
traffic controllers job by correlating the various radar and human
inputs in a meaningful way. This system is being used in most of the
TRACONs around the United States. Common ARTS is the most modern
implementation of ARTS in use at various locations in the United States.
2. Nuclear submarines need Linux to run
The
United States Department of Defense uses Linux – “the U.S. Army is
“the” single largest install base for Red Hat Linux” and the US Navy
nuclear submarine fleet runs on Linux. In 2004, Lockheed Martin
delivered a nuclear submarine to the US government that was powered by
Red Hat Linux.
1. Google, Amazon, and Facebook all use Linux for various web and cloud services
Some
of the biggest players in internet arena like the search giant Google,
the largest social networking site Facebook and biggest online merchant
Amazon, all use Linux for various services.
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Source:Silicon India
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