COMP 3400 Term Paper 1: OS Research Paper and Presentation
Spring 2017
Due: Monday 13 March
(presentations to be made in class, paper can be turned in later that day)
Worth 60 points
This is an individual project

Overview

You will research an operating system history topic, write a paper describing it (outline below), write two potential exam questions on the topic, and give a 6-8 minute oral presentation to the class on March 13. Note that the project timeline runs concurrently with that of programming Project 3.

Topic Selection

Select your top three choices from among these historically signficiant operating systems -- Apple MacOS or OSX or iOS, Microsoft DOS or Windows, IBM OS360 or 370, BeOS, Sun's Solaris, Multics, UNIX, Linux, Android, other -- and let me know your top three by February 20 (email or in person). I will assign topics based on your preferences. I will try to assign each of you a different topic.

Paper/Presentation Recommended Outline

Here is a generic outline for both the written and oral report:
  1. Introduction
  2. Origins, History and Significance
  3. (technical description of one OS feature)
  4. Summary
The main body of your report will be the two middle sections. "Origins, History and Significance" should introduce the Operating System through those three aspects of its existence. What motivated the development of this OS? Why is it important? The third section gives a technical description on one feature of the OS that you select. It should be presented at the level of topics we've covered in this course. In other words, it should cover some internal OS structure not a superficial feature. I have OS textbooks that you can borrow for this section if you wish. All of them include case studies of different operating systems. I expect the first and last sections to be no more than one or two paragraphs in length.

Specification for paper

Specification for presentation

Specification for exam questions

You will provide two questions for possible inclusion on the exam.

Grading

Due to the nature of this project, no late work will be accepted. The paper will be graded based both on its content and how well it meets the format specifications. The presentation will be graded based on its content, how well the graphic presentation meets the format specifications, and how well organized and presented the oral presentation is. Here is the breakdown of the 60 point total: The 60 points of this project represents 7.5% of your grade. I will assign a similar project later in the semester on a networks topic.

To submit

Submit your paper and questions by email to psanderson@otterbein.edu, and your presentations to the Google Drive folder (TBA), by the deadlines given above. Remember that late submissions will not be accepted!


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Peter Sanderson (PSanderson@otterbein.edu)