Difference between revisions of "86-DOS"
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− | 86-DOS was the CP/M work alike that was being written by Tim Patterson. | + | '''86-DOS''' was the [[CP/M]] work-alike that was being written by Tim Patterson. |
There is a great information site [https://web.archive.org/web/20181002215506/http://www.86dos.org/index.htm http://www.86dos.org/index.htm] | There is a great information site [https://web.archive.org/web/20181002215506/http://www.86dos.org/index.htm http://www.86dos.org/index.htm] | ||
− | One thing that is interesting about 86-DOS on the [[S-100]] type machines, is that unlike the [[IBM PC]] | + | One thing that is interesting about 86-DOS on the [[S-100]] type machines, is that unlike the [[IBM PC]] the S-100's could access the full megabyte of RAM. According to Tim Patterson this feature was used within [[Microsoft]] until the creation of 32-bit tools to link the [[linking|linker]] that Microsoft had built because it needed so much memory. Although I was always under the impression that Microsoft had their compilers ported to a [[VAX]] and [[cross-compiler|cross-compiled]] stuff from there as it was faster, and didn't have the same memory limits... but that's from some un-based rumor I heard so you know... grain of salt. |
== How do I get this to run == | == How do I get this to run == | ||
− | There is a download like available to a [[SIMH]] image of the boot disk [http://schorn.ch/cpm/zip/86dos.zip here] Simple download the zip file & extract it, then use a version of SIMH's 3.0 or higher Altair Z80 emulator to bootstrap it. Although the name may seem misleading, the Altair z80 simulates a development environment that allows for an 8086 | + | There is a download like available to a [[SIMH]] image of the boot disk [http://schorn.ch/cpm/zip/86dos.zip here] Simple download the zip file & extract it, then use a version of SIMH's 3.0 or higher [[Altair]] [[Zilog Z80|Z80]] emulator to [[bootstrap]] it. Although the name may seem misleading, the Altair z80 simulates a development environment that allows for an [[Intel 8086|8086]] [[co-processor]] to execute the 86-DOS Operating System. |
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− | [[Category: | + | |
+ | [[Category: DOS]] |
Latest revision as of 13:07, 22 May 2023
86-DOS | |
Booting up the 86-DOS system | |
Type: | Singletasking, Singleuser |
---|---|
Creator: | Seattle Computer Products |
Architecture: | IBM PC |
This Version: | 1.0 (1981) |
Date Released: | 1981 |
86-DOS was the CP/M work-alike that was being written by Tim Patterson.
There is a great information site http://www.86dos.org/index.htm
One thing that is interesting about 86-DOS on the S-100 type machines, is that unlike the IBM PC the S-100's could access the full megabyte of RAM. According to Tim Patterson this feature was used within Microsoft until the creation of 32-bit tools to link the linker that Microsoft had built because it needed so much memory. Although I was always under the impression that Microsoft had their compilers ported to a VAX and cross-compiled stuff from there as it was faster, and didn't have the same memory limits... but that's from some un-based rumor I heard so you know... grain of salt.
How do I get this to run
There is a download like available to a SIMH image of the boot disk here Simple download the zip file & extract it, then use a version of SIMH's 3.0 or higher Altair Z80 emulator to bootstrap it. Although the name may seem misleading, the Altair z80 simulates a development environment that allows for an 8086 co-processor to execute the 86-DOS Operating System.