In Linux you have Cron which manages most of the scheduling. Of course if you mean scheduling that happens when a user shutdown or starts up a computer you would be talking about init which is the first program started when booting Linux.
Alternatively you could use another scheduler such as atd if you are used to an UNIX like scheduler system.
"What is the pay rate for Surgical schedulers in New York?"
Linux is the kernel.
There are two standard job schedulers in Unix - 'at' and 'cron'. Neither can be answered in a short answer so it is suggested that you do an internet search on either of these two commands, or use the 'man' or 'info' command on 'at' or 'cron' on your Unix/Linux system.
The kernel.
There are no "joined" Linux and Windows operating systems, so there is no name for them.
No. Red Hat Enterprise Linux is simply a commercial Linux distribution primarily used for servers. It was never a nickname for Linux itself.
It's an algorithm that is used for CPU schedulers.
There is no the text editor in Linux. There are dozens of possible text editors available for Linux, such as:edviVimEmacsJOENanoJEDKateGeditMousepadLeafpadjEditXeditGeanyNEditJuffEdJOVE
A computer schedular can be used for many different things in relation to computers. There are schedulers that shut down the computer at a certain time as well as download schedulers which organise when downloads should take place.
Exactly what the name says: It displays and sets the date on a Linux system.
Linux was named by Ari Lemmke, who ran the FTP server where Linux was originally published. Linus Torvalds originally wanted to call the project "Freax", a combination of "free", "freak", and "Unix", but Lemmke's name stuck.
There are many open-source OS distributions (distros) branching out from the Linux Kernel. Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Puppy, to name but three.