1 TB processor? Doesn't sound like you're particularly ready
If you built the entire platform around known standards (x86/ARM, PCI Express, USB, etc) then you should be able to install OSes and similar that utilize those architectures. Otherwise you'd have to rewrite everything or find a way to port something like GCC to the operating system you also had to develop.
Perhaps you would be better off studying the A+ curriculum?I own a 1 TB Processor
Do you first of all know how to do this? And I wouldn't "code" your own OS if I were you...
Perhaps you would be better off studying the A+ curriculum?
I own a 1 TB Processor
I seriously doubt it. You might own a 1TB hard drive but there is no such thing as a 1TB processor. Processor speed is GHZ not TB which registers size not speed.
I think there was a figure floating around somewhere that the estimate in man hours for the Linux kernel alone was in the realm of $1.4 billion in 2008.Linux was created as a community online
True!If you have the knowledge and hardware to build your own CPU/Motherboard/hard drive plus write/code a OS. Why are you asking if you built your own hardware if a common OS would run on it? It would seem to me that you would already know that answer.
They don't make 1.1TB hard drives, they come in standard sizes such as 1TB, 1.5TB, 2TB, etc. I'm not sure how you get a processor and hard drive confused, but what defines your processor is not your speed. If we ask what processor you have, you don't say 4.4GHz, you say I have an Intel Core i7 4970K (as an example).Sorry, I meant to say 1.1TB not 1TB and I meant to say Hardrive instead of processor, My processor is 4.4GHz