Legend has it that in late 1980, IBM was developing what would become the original IBM Personal Computer. CP/M was by far the most popular operating system in use at the time, and IBM felt it needed CP/M in order to compete. When IBM approached Gary Kildall, author of CP/M, for a license, Kildall kept the IBM executives waiting for hours while he went flying in his airplane. He missed one of the great opportunities of the century when IBM then turned to Microsoft, who was already supplying a version of the BASIC computer language, to provide an operating system. That operating system was QDOS.
This story is not generally accepted as true. By many accounts, Kildall did not handle business negotiations and left that to his wife and attorney, neither of whom was willing to sign IBM's non-disclosure agreement.
Since Microsoft was a CP/M subcontractor—Microsoft sold a plug-in Z80 board that made the Apple II capable of running CP/M—IBM asked if they could subcontract CP/M for the IBM PC. Microsoft's contract would not permit it. However, Microsoft was acquainted with Paterson, and purchased a non-exclusive license for QDOS—by then being marketed under the name 86-DOS—from Seattle Computer Products in April 1981 for $25,000. In July 1981, Microsoft purchased all rights to the operating system for $50,000.
QDOS met IBM's main criteria: It looked like CP/M, and it was easy to adapt existing 8-bit CP/M programs to run under it. Microsoft licensed QDOS to IBM, and it became PC-DOS 1.0. This license also permitted Microsoft to sell DOS to other companies, which it did.
PC-DOS 2.0 was an almost complete rewrite of DOS, so by March 1983, very little of QDOS remained. The most enduring element of QDOS was its primitive line editor, EDLIN, which remained the only editor supplied with Microsoft versions of DOS until the release of MS-DOS 5.0 in June 1991.
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|