It is interesting that operating systems exist for server applications at all.
What is the problem they are solving?
What is the difference between what an operating system contains and can do and what you need it to do?
Why would I want to rent a server to run a program that performs a task, and also have the same system performing extra tasks - like intrusion detection, intrusion detection software updates, etc.
I just don't understand why compiled program that has enough disk and memory would ever be asked to restart for a random fucking reason having nothing to do with the task at hand. It seems like the architecture of server software is not created intelligently.
What is the problem they are solving?
What is the difference between what an operating system contains and can do and what you need it to do?
Why would I want to rent a server to run a program that performs a task, and also have the same system performing extra tasks - like intrusion detection, intrusion detection software updates, etc.
I just don't understand why compiled program that has enough disk and memory would ever be asked to restart for a random fucking reason having nothing to do with the task at hand. It seems like the architecture of server software is not created intelligently.