OS/2
OS/2 is an operating system that was originally made by a joint agreement between the Microsoft and IBM companies. The name stands for "Operating System/2". It was intended to replace MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows. OS/2 was maintained by IBM until 2006.
|  | |
| Developer | IBM Microsoft (1.0–1.3) | 
|---|---|
| Written in | C, C++ and assembly language | 
| Working state | Historical, now developed as ArcaOS | 
| Source model | Closed source | 
| Initial release | December 1987 | 
| Latest release | 4.52 / December 2001 | 
| Marketing target | Professionals, servers | 
| Available in | Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian | 
| Platforms | x86, PowerPC | 
| Kernel type | Hybrid kernel | 
| Influenced by | MS-DOS, IBM PC DOS | 
| Default user interface | Workplace Shell Graphical user interface | 
| License | Proprietary | 
| Succeeded by | First by eComStation, then ArcaOS | 
| Official website | OS/2 Warp (Archived) | 
IBM discontinued its support for OS/2 on 31 December 2006. Since then, it has been updated, maintained and marketed under the name eComStation. In 2015 it was announced that a new OEM distribution of OS/2 would be released that was to be called ArcaOS.
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