Unity Os



Unity Operating System (UOS), an in-house developed operating system by China-based software designers including NewStart, Wuhan Deepin Technology and stated-owned CEC, has made the first version available in December. Now beta and release candidate versions are available for download.

  1. Unity Os Version
  2. Unity Operating System Download
  3. Unity Desktop
  4. Unity Hospice
  5. Unity 2 Download

Unity Os Version

The system can support domestic CPU platforms such as x86, Loongson, Shenwei, ARM, etc., and can replace the Microsoft Windows operating system to meet the needs of different users for office, life, and entertainment.

So far, the UOS has completed adaption with hardware and software partners including:

Install Unity support for Visual Studio. Visual Studio Tools for Unity is a free extension that provides support for writing and debugging C# and more. Visit the Tools for Unity overview for a complete list of what the extensions includes. Hey, I just wanted to show you my latest work (WIP ofc). Let me know what you guys think. Some UI elements are from Modern UI Package. Who knows, maybe I'll. Unity Operating SystemまたはUnified Operating System (通称: UOS、中国語: 统一操作系统) は、UnionTech (中国語: 统信软件) によって開発中. Unity is a cross-platform game engine developed by Unity Technologies, first announced and released in June 2005 at Apple Inc.' S Worldwide Developers Conference as a Mac OS X-exclusive game engine. As of 2018 update, the engine had been extended to support more than 25 platforms.

  1. The first domestic CAD software
  2. A domestic PC maker
  3. WPS, Chinese version of Microsoft Office
  4. Another office suite
  5. China-made processor
  6. iFlytek, China's national champion in voice recognition
  7. An important CPU maker
  8. Domestic cloud desktop provider
  9. A must-use device by banks
  10. Popular software

UOS is divided into desktop version and server version. The desktop version uses an independently developed desktop environment.

According to the current adaptation progress, UOS has released a total of six ISO packages for three architectures, including the alpha, beta and RC versions.

Here are the beta and RC versions of the ISO packages for UOS that you can download:

  1. UOS x86_64 beta desktop version (Code: t2nt)
  2. UOS x86_64 RC desktop version (Code: 45b8)
  3. UOS x86_64 RC server version (Code: xjg4)
  4. UOS mips64el RC desktop version (Code: 1lxl)
  5. UOS mips64el RC server version (Code: mu6h)
  6. UOS arm64 RC desktop version (Code: llub)
  7. UOS arm64 RC server version (Code: pxkx)

Brief Update:

On January 14, 2020, the first stable version the UOS was released:

Unity oscillating movement


Dell EMC
TypeSubsidiary
NYSE: EMC (1986–2016)[1]
IndustryComputer storage
Founded1979; 42 years ago
Founders
Headquarters,
United States
Worldwide
Key people
Jeff Clarke
(President, Infrastructure Solutions Group, Dell EMC)
ProductsSee EMC products
ParentDell Technologies
Websitewww.dellemc.com/en-us/storage/unity.htm

Dell EMC Unity is one of Dell EMC’s mid-range storage array product lines. It was designed from the ground up as the next generation midrange unified storage array after the EMC VNX and VNXe series, which evolved out of the EMC Clariion SAN disk array.

History[edit]

Clariion’s predecessor, HADA (High Availability Disk Array) was developed in 1991 by Data General Corporation, one of the first minicomputer companies. HADA was designed to significantly improve the performance of commodity hard disk drives by running large numbers of them in parallel. It was one of the first products on the market with a cached RAID system, and featured hot-swapping and several other innovations.[2][3]

HADA was initially sold exclusively as an array with the company's Aviion line of computer systems as the HADA (High Availability Disk Array) and later the HADA II [6] before being made available for broader open systems attachment and renamed CLARiiON in 1994.[4]Fibre Channel support was added in 1997.[citation needed]

As CLARiiON sales grew, Data General created a separate CLARiiON division[5] and began selling the product both direct to Aviion and Data General MV customers, but also as an OEM offering to its systems competitors, including Sun Microsystems, Hewlett Packard and Silicon Graphics.[6] CLARiiON was considered the primary value generator in EMC Corporation’s decision to purchase Data General in 1999.[7]

Development of the CLARiiON product line continued under EMC. The company introduced IP-based storage access in 2000.[8] In 2001, Dell and EMC entered into a partnership, and the CLARiiON line began being resold by Dell.[9] In 2002, the CX200, CX400 and CX600 entry-level lines were introduced, the result of the year-long collaboration between the two companies.[10] In 2003, CLARiiON became the industry's first NEBS-certified storage system.[11]

Subsequent processor and bandwidth upgrades led to a new CX lineup (CX300, CX500, CX700) and a low-end, SATA-based CLARiiON array, the AX100 (now updated to AX150).

In May 2006, EMC introduced the third generation of CLARiiON, named CX3 UltraScale. The lineup, consisting of the CX3-20, CX3-40 and CX3-80, was the industry's only storage platform to leverage end-to-end 4 Gbit/s (4 billion bits per second) Fibre Channel and PCI-Express technologies.[12] Later in 2007, the line was expanded to include a new entry-level storage system, the CX3-10.[citation needed]

Unity Operating System Download

Development continued until 2011, when EMC introduced the new VNX series of unified storage disk arrays intended to combine and replace both CLARiiON and Celerra products. The new suite of VNX SAN/NAS arrays included three product lines: an entry-level VNXe, the VNX5000 series and the VNX7000 series. The new VNX line was marketed as the only storage system offering automated file and block sub-LUN tiering using its FAST technology.[13]

In early 2012, with development continuing on the VNX lines, both CLARiiON and Celerra were discontinued. Development efforts in 2012 and 2013 included a strong focus on supporting data warehousing applications and multicore architectures, culminating in MCx, billed by some as the second generation of VNX. The massive hyperthreading enabled by multicore architectural support led to significant improvements in caching, file IOPS and database transaction rates.[14] In 2014, MCx support was added to the VNXe line.[15]

Dell EMC Unity was introduced in 2016. The new platform virtualized the “data mover” NAS functionality originally developed for the Celerra product line and moved it into software, simplifying hardware setup and enabling file system upgrades.[16] The transition from VNX to Unity was described by one Dell EMC insider as one of replacing an entire car part-by-part in the middle of a race, without pit stops. The improvements outlined in Chad Sacak’s blog post included a 3x performance boost, reduction from a 7U to a 2U form factor, almost 50% power consumption reduction and significantly faster rack installation.[17]

Dell EMC Unity’s new transactional file system supported traditional NAS use cases while better supporting transactional file applications. It included Fibre Channel, FCoE, NFS, SMB 3.0 (CIFS), and iSCSI protocols. All flash and hybrid Dell EMC Unity models were introduced in 2016, as were a new HTML5 user interface and, later that year, inline compression with inline dedupe scheduled for later in 2017.[18]

In May 2017, Dell EMC Unity was updated to support many new features and capabilities including Dynamic Pools. This is a new Pool type introduced in Dell Unity OE version 4.2.x allowing users to flexibly add 1 or more drives at a time. This helps reduce drive rebuild times and flash wear when compared to the use of Traditional Pools. A Dynamic Pool is created by default when creating a Pool in Unisphere with Dell EMC Unity OE version 4.2.x and later. Dynamic Pools are only supported on Dell EMC Unity All Flash Systems. Additionally with the May release, support for a 256TB file system and compression for file, block archiving to the cloud, thin clones with snapshots and AppSync integration for integrated Copy Data Management (iCDM), and. EMC Investor Relations. EMC Corporation. Retrieved 6 September 2016.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)

Unity
  • ^US patent 5371743, Joseph P. DeYesso (Walpole, MA), Robert C. Solomon (Kensington, NH), Stephen J. Todd (Shrewsbury, MA), Mark C. Lippitt (Boulder, CO), 'On-line module replacement in a multiple module data processing system', issued 1994-12-06
  • Unity
  • ^'Top Ten Innovative Enterprise Storage Hardware Products'. Fosketts. Stephen Foskett. 2008-11-15.
  • ^Wylie, Margie (1992-07-20). 'DG stresses reliability with its two new AViiON servers'. Network World. IDG. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  • ^Burns, Christine (1994-01-24). 'Clariion, Connor attack LAN storage problem with RAID'. Network World. IDG. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  • ^Nash, Kim (1992-09-21). 'DG makes waves in RAID storage market'. ComputerWorld. IDG. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  • ^'EMC buys Data General for $1.1 billion'. CNET. CNET. 2002-01-02.
  • ^Connor, Deni (2001-12-10). 'EMC 'Net App killer' short of goal'. NetworkWorld. IDG. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  • ^Neel, Dan (2001-10-29). 'Storage worlds collide'. InfoWorld. InfoWorld Media Group. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  • ^Apicella, Mario (2003-01-20). 'With room to grow'. InfoWorld. InfoWorld Media Group. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  • ^'Dell, EMC deal is a reconciliation of a conflicted 10-year marriage'. ComputerWorld. IDG. 2015-10-12.
  • Unity Desktop

  • ^'EMC Redefines Midrange Storage'. CXO Today. Trivone. 2006-05-09.
  • ^'EMC combines Clariion, Celerra line in VNX, revamps entire storage line'. ComputerWorld. IDG. 2011-01-18.
  • ^'EMC Announces Next-Generation VNX – Takes It Full Multicore'. GeekFluent. Dave Henry. 2013-09-04.
  • ^'EMC Announces Next-Generation VNX – Takes It Full Multicore'. Divi. Dave Henry. 2013-09-04.
  • ^'EMC Unity or VNX3? You tell me'. The Register. Situation Publishing. 2016-05-17.
  • ^'EMC World 2016: Unity… the story BEHIND the story'. Virtual Geek. Chad Sacak. 2016-05-07.
  • ^'EMC Unity: Redesign or rehash?'. SearchStorage. TechTarget. 2016-05-05.
  • ^'Dell EMC Releases New All-Flash Unity Models'. StorageReview.com. StorageReview.com. 2017-05-08.
  • ^'Dell EMC Unity storage bookings touch $1 billion in 419 days'. InfoTechLead. Kizhakedath Media Services. 2017-06-29.
  • ^ abcd'Unity Architecture – Part I'. San Enthusiast. Azhagarasu A. 2017-02-01.
  • ^'EMC re-engineers its VNX flashy boxen, puts Unity on the label'. The Register. Situation Media. 2016-05-03.
  • Unity Hospice

    Unity osuUnity Os
  • ^'RAID Configuration of EMC Unity Hybrid and All Flash Storage'. Victor Virtualization. Victor Wu. 2017-07-23.
  • Unity 2 Download

  • ^'Introduction to Next Gen Dell EMC Unity'. San Enthusiast. Azhagarasu A. 2017-08-15.
  • Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dell_EMC_Unity&oldid=986371860'