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A control panel is a flat, often vertical, area where control or monitoring instruments are displayed or it is an enclosed unit that is the part of a system [1] that users can access, such as the control panel of a security system (also called control unit).
In 2015, Frank Fischer, the CEO of Breadbox, died and efforts on the operating system stopped until later in 2017 when it was bought by blueway.Softworks. [2] [3] PC/GEOS should not be confused with the 8-bit GEOS product from the same company, which runs on the Commodore 64 and Apple II.
[2] In the classic Mac OS, a control panel served a similar purpose. In macOS, the equivalent to control panels are referred to as System Preferences. In web hosting, browser-based control panels, such as CPanel and Plesk, are used to manage servers, web services and users. There are different control panels in free desktops, like GNOME, KDE ...
Control panel may refer to: Control panel (engineering), a flat, often vertical, area where control instrumentation is mounted; Control panel (software), the tool in the operating system which allows most or all of the settings to be changed through a user interface Control Panel (Windows) System Preferences, a computer program in the macOS ...
[1] [2] Development can begin from existing resources like a kernel, an operating system, or a bootloader, or it can also be made completely from scratch. The development platform could be a bare hardware machine, which is the nature of an operating system, but it could also be developed and tested on a virtual machine. Since the hobbyist must ...
In embedded systems, a board support package (BSP) is the layer of software containing hardware-specific boot loaders, device drivers and other routines that allow a given embedded operating system, for example a real-time operating system (RTOS), to function in a given hardware environment (a motherboard), integrated with the embedded ...
Amstrad CPC 464 [1] (w/DDI-1 disk drive interface), 664, 6128, 6128Plus; Amstrad PCW 8256/8512/9512/9256/10; Amust Executive 816; Apple II (with a Z-80 card like the Microsoft SoftCard; on some clones a SoftCard equivalent was built into the mainboard) Apple III (with a Z-80 card like the Apple SoftCard III) [2] [3] Applied Technology MicroBee ...
Windows 3.1 is a major release of Microsoft Windows.It was released to manufacturing on April 6, 1992, as a successor to Windows 3.0.Like its predecessors, the Windows 3.1 series run as a shell on top of MS-DOS; it was the last Windows 16-bit operating environment as all future versions of Windows had moved to 32-bit.