[FIX] fix a tiny erro

多了个is
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@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ The course impressed me in two aspects:
Firstly, the textbook: *Operating Systems: Principles and Practice (2nd Edition)* is written in an insightful but easy-to-understand way, well compensated for the lack of theoretical knowledge in MIT6.S081, I highly recommend you to read this book. Firstly, the textbook: *Operating Systems: Principles and Practice (2nd Edition)* is written in an insightful but easy-to-understand way, well compensated for the lack of theoretical knowledge in MIT6.S081, I highly recommend you to read this book.
Secondly, the project for this course *Pintos* is is a great journey for system hackers. *Pintos* is a toy operating system developed at Stanford for educational use. The author Ben Pfaff even published a [paper](https://benpfaff.org/papers/pintos.pdf) to explain the design principles of *Pintos*. Secondly, the project for this course *Pintos* is a great journey for system hackers. *Pintos* is a toy operating system developed at Stanford for educational use. The author Ben Pfaff even published a [paper](https://benpfaff.org/papers/pintos.pdf) to explain the design principles of *Pintos*.
Unlike the small but comprehensive design philosophy in MIT's xv6 labs, *Pintos* emphasizes system design and implementation more. The codebase is about 10,000 LOC and only provides the basic functions of a working operating system. The four projects let you add scheduler (Project1), system calls (Project2), virtual memory (Project3), and the file system (Project4) to this extremely simple operating system. All projects leave a a big design space for students and require more than 2000 LOC. Based on the [feedback](https://www.quora.com/What-is-it-like-to-take-CS-140-Operating-Systems-at-Stanford) from Stanford students, the latter two projects take over 40 hours per person even in teams of 3-4 people. Unlike the small but comprehensive design philosophy in MIT's xv6 labs, *Pintos* emphasizes system design and implementation more. The codebase is about 10,000 LOC and only provides the basic functions of a working operating system. The four projects let you add scheduler (Project1), system calls (Project2), virtual memory (Project3), and the file system (Project4) to this extremely simple operating system. All projects leave a a big design space for students and require more than 2000 LOC. Based on the [feedback](https://www.quora.com/What-is-it-like-to-take-CS-140-Operating-Systems-at-Stanford) from Stanford students, the latter two projects take over 40 hours per person even in teams of 3-4 people.