Computer Science, asked by a32984746, 6 months ago

The type of Operating System which allows multiple jobs to be

processed simultaneously. ​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

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Explanation:

Preemptive multitasking allows the computer system to more reliably guarantee to each process a regular "slice" of operating time. It also allows the system to deal rapidly with important external events like incoming data, which might require the immediate attention of one or another process. Operating systems were developed to take advantage of these hardware capabilities and run multiple processes preemptively. Preemptive multitasking was implemented in the PDP-6 Monitor and MULTICS in 1964, in OS/360 MFT in 1967, and in Unix in 1969, and was available in some operating systems for computers as small as DEC's PDP-8; it is a core feature of all Unix-like operating systems, such as Linux, Solaris and BSD with its derivatives,[6] as well as modern versions of Windows.

Answered by Anonymous
2

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Multiprocessing

Multiprocessing sometimes refers to executing multiple processes (programs) at the same time.

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