Both O's have the long O (oh) sound. The E is silent.
In the word "postpone," both o's have a short vowel sound (as in "pot" or "top").
One of his favorite tricks is to postpone any payments that are due.
The "o" in "Os" in Jan van Os is pronounced with a short "o" sound. So it is pronounced as "Jan van Oss".
The future tense of postpone is will postpone.
Let's postpone the presentation.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to postpone are postponement and the gerund, postponing.
Both 'o' sounds are long, as in the word 'oh'. However, in informal speech the first 'o' may be shortened to an indeterminate sound, and the 't' not pronounced at all, making it something like p'spone.
No. that is the way it is spelled: postpone.
Filing an appeal will postpone the execution of a prisoner sentenced to death.
Rather than postpone the football game, the clubs played in another nearby city.
To postpone
The short answer is that a real time OS has a very short (in real-time) and predictable latency response to interrupts and/or task thread switching when compared a standard computer or PC OS. A dedicated RT OS, meaning it performs more specific and/or limited functions can have a ten-fold decrease in the number of clock cycles or task switch times when compared to a traditional OS.