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                No Operating System |  
              | by: 
                Paul Siegel |  
              | Imagine a computer with no operating system. If you can do that, you can imagine a computer that is extremely difficult to hack
 into. A computer that is almost immune to viruses. A computer
 that rarely crashes.
 
 Too good to be true? No, such a computer has been invented.
 
 Eric Hauk and Eric Uner, 2 former Motorola engineers, invented
 this computer. They became so frustrated and annoyed by hack
 attacks and by all the time they wasted installing software patches,
 that they decided to change their server. Instead of an operating
 system, they designed a chip storing a "kernel" of only about
 4 Kilobytes of code. They founded Bodacion Technologies Inc.
 (http://www.bodacion.com) to market their computer, which is
 called Hydra.
 
 This is essentially the same idea that is used for medical devices
 and for game-playing machines like Nintendo. Nintendo rarely
 breaks down even though young hackers are constantly trying.
 
 Why is an operating-system-less computer more sturdy than one
 with an operating system? What do many viruses do? Once they
 get into the system they manage to modify operating-system instructions
 to kill the whole system. But if operating-system instructions
 do not exist, or rather they exist in hardware, they cannot be
 modified. Result: a computer you can depend on.
 
 Of course, this tremendous reliability comes at price. Why does
 the operating system have millions of lines of code? To increase
 the flexibility of the computer. This is why such computers are
 called general purpose computers. Without the O.S., the computer
 loses this flexibility and becomes one that is tailored for a
 given purpose.
 
 Producing many tailored non-O.S. computers is now worthwhile
 in order to achieve greater reliability.
 
 It seems to me that this new technology is better than it appears
 to be at first blush. It may even be used to make general purpose
 computers more resistant to viruses. If a non-O.S. computer were
 used as an input-output device for a conventional O.S. computer,
 it could kill viruses before they reach the conventional computer.
 
 I believe that non-O.S. computers have a great future!
 
  About the Author 
 Paul -the soarING- Siegel is a provocative Internet speaker and author of HELPFULNESS MARKETNG, a book stressing learning, cooperation
 and community. Learn about it and also get your ebook reviewed
 at http://www.learningfountain.com/. Subscribe to newsletter,
 LearningFOUNT, by sending blank email to: mailto:LearningFOUNT-subscribe@topica.com.
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