Consider the map above. You are starting from Boynton Labs on the right and you
ID: 3864707 • Letter: C
Question
Consider the map above. You are starting from Boynton Labs on the right and you want to go to the US military base, going through the city of ALDERWOOD after leaving the lab. Represent the map above as a graph. Find the search tree using a breadth first search strategy. Find the number of nodes you will have to visit in order to get to your destination, list them. Find the search tree using depth first search strategy. Find the number of nodes you will have to visit in order to get to your destination, list them. Which search strategy is better?Explanation / Answer
Unix was originally written in assembly language.[12] Ken Thompson wrote B, mainly based on BCPL, based on his experience in the MULTICS project. B was replaced by C, and Unix, rewritten in C, developed into a large, complex family of inter-related operating systems which have been influential in every modern operating system (see History).
The Unix-like family is a diverse group of operating systems, with several major sub-categories including System V, BSD, and Linux. The name "UNIX" is a trademark of The Open Group which licenses it for use with any operating system that has been shown to conform to their definitions. "UNIX-like" is commonly used to refer to the large set of operating systems which resemble the original UNIX.
Unix-like systems run on a wide variety of computer architectures. They are used heavily for servers in business, as well as workstations in academic and engineering environments. Free UNIX variants, such as Linux and BSD, are popular in these areas.
Four operating systems are certified by The Open Group (holder of the Unix trademark) as Unix. HP's HP-UX and IBM's AIX are both descendants of the original System V Unix and are designed to run only on their respective vendor's hardware. In contrast, Sun Microsystems's Solaris can run on multiple types of hardware, including x86 and Sparc servers, and PCs. Apple's macOS, a replacement for Apple's earlier (non-Unix) Mac OS, is a hybrid kernel-based BSD variant derived from NeXTSTEP, Mach, and FreeBSD.