Resource containers: a new facility for resource management in server systems
OSDI '99 Proceedings of the third symposium on Operating systems design and implementation
Xen and the art of virtualization
SOSP '03 Proceedings of the nineteenth ACM symposium on Operating systems principles
Using asset specificity and asset scope to measure the value of IT
Communications of the ACM - Interaction design and children
Proceedings of the 11th workshop on ACM SIGOPS European workshop
Operating system support for planetary-scale network services
NSDI'04 Proceedings of the 1st conference on Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation - Volume 1
Understanding and dealing with operator mistakes in internet services
OSDI'04 Proceedings of the 6th conference on Symposium on Opearting Systems Design & Implementation - Volume 6
Using magpie for request extraction and workload modelling
OSDI'04 Proceedings of the 6th conference on Symposium on Opearting Systems Design & Implementation - Volume 6
K42: an infrastructure for operating system research
ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review
K42: lessons for the OS community
ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review
Auditing to keep online storage services honest
HOTOS'07 Proceedings of the 11th USENIX workshop on Hot topics in operating systems
Constructing and managing appliances for cloud deployments from repositories of reusable components
HotCloud'09 Proceedings of the 2009 conference on Hot topics in cloud computing
Verifiable resource accounting for cloud computing services
Proceedings of the 3rd ACM workshop on Cloud computing security workshop
Towards verifiable resource accounting for outsourced computation
Proceedings of the 9th ACM SIGPLAN/SIGOPS international conference on Virtual execution environments
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Existing enterprise information technology (IT) systems often inhibit business flexibility, sometimes with dire consequences. In this position paper, I argue that operating system research should be measured, among other things, against our ability to improve the speed at which businesses can change. I describe some of the ways in which businesses need to change rapidly, speculate about why existing IT infrastructures inhibit useful change, and suggest some relevant OS research problems.