Difference between revisions of "CP/M"

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m (totally botched the format.. argh!)
m (oops supercalc, not visicalc!)
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CP/M was the inspiration to [[MS-DOS]].  It assigns letters for each drive, however it doesn't use directories.  CP/M was a portable operating system, that was popularized because it was cheap, and was not resource intesnsive, unlike [[Unix]] which had very restrictive licensing.  CP/M was also seen as a popular choice of an OS on the [[S-100]] type machines, although not all machines that ran CP/M had S-100 slots (The [[Commodore 128]] would be a good example of such).
 
CP/M was the inspiration to [[MS-DOS]].  It assigns letters for each drive, however it doesn't use directories.  CP/M was a portable operating system, that was popularized because it was cheap, and was not resource intesnsive, unlike [[Unix]] which had very restrictive licensing.  CP/M was also seen as a popular choice of an OS on the [[S-100]] type machines, although not all machines that ran CP/M had S-100 slots (The [[Commodore 128]] would be a good example of such).
  
Without doubt the 'killer' application that CP/M had was [[visicalc]].  Not to mention there was a port of [[Zork]] to the CP/M z80 platform.
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Without doubt the 'killer' application that CP/M had was [[SuperCalc]] a [[VisiCalc]] clone.  Not to mention there was a port of [[Zork]] to the CP/M z80 platform.

Revision as of 23:38, 11 February 2009

CP/M was an early OS for microcomputers. It was ported to several CPUs, the most popular ports were for the 8080 and the Z80.


CP/M
Creator: Gary Kildall at Digital Research, Inc.
Architecture: 8080, z80, 8086, 68000
This Version: 3.1


CP/M was the inspiration to MS-DOS. It assigns letters for each drive, however it doesn't use directories. CP/M was a portable operating system, that was popularized because it was cheap, and was not resource intesnsive, unlike Unix which had very restrictive licensing. CP/M was also seen as a popular choice of an OS on the S-100 type machines, although not all machines that ran CP/M had S-100 slots (The Commodore 128 would be a good example of such).

Without doubt the 'killer' application that CP/M had was SuperCalc a VisiCalc clone. Not to mention there was a port of Zork to the CP/M z80 platform.