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Date:      Tue, 07 Aug 2001 00:29:20 -0700
From:      Terry Lambert <tlambert2@mindspring.com>
To:        Mike Meyer <mwm@mired.org>
Cc:        j mckitrick <jcm@FreeBSD-uk.eu.org>, freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: How did the MSFT monopoly start?
Message-ID:  <3B6F98D0.A3C22CC9@mindspring.com>
References:  <20010806142544.A64348@dogma.freebsd-uk.eu.org> <15214.52633.581653.632317@guru.mired.org>

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Mike Meyer wrote:
> Enter the IBM-PC. It's clearly inferior to hardware already on the
> market and cost far to much. The largest PC retailer of the time -
> ComputerLand - figured they'd never be able to sell one. However, it's
> from *IBM*. So all those IT managers start buying them, because
> "nobody was ever fired for buying IBM." The demand outstrips the
> supply, the clones start showing up, and the revolution is on.

FWIW: In the original version, the IBM PC was powered by a
Motorolla 68k.  They switched to the Intel 8088 (*not* 8086,
yet) because Motorolla could not commit volume, and IBM wanted
a license to fabricate.

> The machines came with an OS called PC-DOS. You could also get
> CP/M-86, the 8086 version of the previous dominant OS, but it cost
> extra without providing any extra functionality. PC-DOS came from
> MSFT. IBM had apparently wanted to purchase it outright, but Gates
> convinced them to pay a percentage instead. In doing so, Gates stole
> the revolution from IBM.

CP/M-88 and MP/M-88.  The 86 was later.


> Radio Shack created a "better-than-IBM" compatible -
> better graphics, etc. - and it died because the available software
> wouldn't run on it properly. In other words, even then, if you
> couldn't run the popular software, you were pretty much dead.

The Tandy 1000 was a late comer in the game.  It used a
non-standard UART, so the serial port never worked right
with standard off-the-shelf software, right about the
time that people started to get into modems, big-time.

DEC also built a machine, the DEC Rainbow, that used a
non-standard UART, and had the same problem.  They finally
went to a standard UART with the Revision B Rainbow II
motherboard, but by then, it was too late, and they had
missed their window.


> FWIW, Gates sold IBM a product he didn't have. He then went out and
> bought QDOS - the Quick and Dirty OS - from SCC, which had written it
> for their 8086 S-100 boxes because Digital Research kept delaying
> CP/M-86.

IBM attempted several times to contact Digital Research
about licensing CP/M, but they never returned IBM's calls,
and then their founder died.  Cringely covers this in
detail, both in his book, and the videos based on it.

-- Terry

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