Clone (computer science)

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Århundreder: 1. århundrede - 2. århundrede - 3. århundrede

Årtier: 70'erne 80'erne 90'erne 100'erne Compatibility with the original system is usually the explicit purpose of cloning hardware or low-level software such as operating systems. Application software can be cloned simply by providing similar functionality (all word processors have the same basic purpose), but may also be designed to support specific file formats (e.g. OpenOffice is intended to supplant Microsoft Office).

Clones are created for any number of reasons, including competition, standardization, and availability across platforms.

Hardware

When IBM came out with the IBM PC in 1981, other companies such as Compaq decided to put out a clone of the PC as a legal reimplementation from the PCs documentation or reverse engineering. As most of the components, except the PCs BIOS, were publicly available, all Compaq had to do was reverse engineer the BIOS. The result was a machine with better value than the archetypes that the machine resembled. The term "PC clone" fell out of use in the 1990s; the class of machines it now describes are simply called PCs or Intel machines (or even Wintel machines).

While agreed that the term has fallen mostly into commercial disuse, the term clone for PCs referred to, and still applies to, a PC made to entry level or above standard (at the time it was made) which bears no commercial branding. (EG ACER, IBM, HP, DELL) This includes, but is not limited to, PCs assembled by home users or Corporate IT Departments.

In both mentioned cases these PC Clones are made to suit specific purposes while commercial PCs are made to try and suit as many purposes as possible.

Software

Software can be cloned by reverse engineering or legal reimplementation from documentation or other sources, or by observing a program's appearance and behavior. The reasons for cloning may include circumventing undesirable licensing fees or acquiring knowledge about the features of the system. In the United States, the case of Lotus v. Borland allows programmers to clone the public functionality of a program without infringing its copyright.

This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


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