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Scout (operating system)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Scout is a research operating system developed at the University of Arizona. It is communication-oriented and designed around the constraints of network-connected devices like set-top boxes.
![]() | The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline. (February 2018) |
The Scout researchers had in mind a class of devices that they called "network appliances", which include cameras and disks attached to a network. They believed that these devices have in common the following three characteristics:
- Communication-Oriented
- Specialized/Diverse Functionality
- Predictable Performance with Scarce Resources
To satisfy these three requirements, Scout was designed around an abstraction called a "path"; was highly configurable; and offered scheduling and resource allocation policies that provided predictable performance under load.
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