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Analysis of Control Program for Microcomputers (CP/M), detailing its development by Gary Kildall and his wife, Dorothy McEwen Kildall, through their company, Digital Research.
The text explores the operating system's revolutionary three-part architecture—the CCP, BDOS, and the crucial, hardware-abstracting BIOS—which established the first standardized software platform for microcomputers, fostering the market for independent software like WordStar and SuperCalc.
Crucially, the source investigates CP/M's eventual loss of market dominance to MS-DOS, attributing the defeat not to a single missed meeting but to a catastrophic pricing error that allowed Microsoft to win the platform war.
Finally, it confirms that MS-DOS functioned as an architectural clone of CP/M and notes that the original CP/M source code was recently released under a permissive license, sustaining its legacy in modern retro-computing communities.
By 🅱🅴🅽🅹🅰🅼🅸🅽 🅰🅻🅻🅾🆄🅻 𝄟 🅽🅾🆃🅴🅱🅾🅾🅺🅻🅼Analysis of Control Program for Microcomputers (CP/M), detailing its development by Gary Kildall and his wife, Dorothy McEwen Kildall, through their company, Digital Research.
The text explores the operating system's revolutionary three-part architecture—the CCP, BDOS, and the crucial, hardware-abstracting BIOS—which established the first standardized software platform for microcomputers, fostering the market for independent software like WordStar and SuperCalc.
Crucially, the source investigates CP/M's eventual loss of market dominance to MS-DOS, attributing the defeat not to a single missed meeting but to a catastrophic pricing error that allowed Microsoft to win the platform war.
Finally, it confirms that MS-DOS functioned as an architectural clone of CP/M and notes that the original CP/M source code was recently released under a permissive license, sustaining its legacy in modern retro-computing communities.