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The story of how MS-DOS became the industry standard for the 16-bit business computers at the expense of Digital Research’s CP/M is somewhat of a legend among fans of computing history. The event has been described in books, articles and documentaries, with most of them focusing on entertaining details such as corporate drama, back-stabbing and nepotism1.
Some of the more serious accounts mention one important detail of the story: DRI was late with the port of the CP/M to the Intel 8086. When IBM representatives visited in August of 1980, looking for an operating system for their upcoming PC, only the 8-bit version of CP/M could be demonstrated. IBM eventually turned to Microsoft and selected what became MS‑DOS.
In this article, we will examine why CP/M‑86 was delayed and, in the end, speculate how much that delay actually mattered.
I finally got round to publishing a version 1.0 of my long-running hobby project: a bootable DOS live USB image with tools for writers, providing a distraction-free writing environment.
https://github.com/lproven/usb-dos
This is very rushed and the instructions are incomplete. Only FAT16 for now; FAT32 coming real soon now.