EugeneNine wrote:
Ok, so it wan't bills daddy, it was Sams so my memory isn't all that great. And yes I skipped the section prior to that but basically the sale was tossed BG's way and he licensed it just the same way everyone else at IBM already was.
Well, after reading the stuff BigEd linked, saying the sale was "tossed BG's way" is pretty disingenuous.
Sams didn't have any pre-relationship with Gates. He met with MS, asked about their already (quite successful) operation, and then gave them the business. There weren't cronies, glad handing each other on the golf course. Gates and Co. earned their business in the same way Kildall didn't. As they say, 90% of success is just showing up.
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I'm not saying that MS would have made it big on their own, I'm saying that without IBM tossing that sale to Gates who then went to someone else Microsoft would never have existed, it was pure luck on the timing provided by IBM. It wasn't anything brilliant, wasn't any great marketing genius.
You can't say that at all. Was the DOS deal a bounty for Microsoft? Heck yea. Would MS have folded up shop and gone the way of the wind if they DIDN'T get the DOS contract? Unlikely. If Kildall actually inked the deal, MS would have still got all of the language business. And there's nothing that would have stopped them from continuing on to applications and other things.
Would they have made Windows? Who knows. But they probably would have still been successful in the Macintosh space, and they very easily could have created Windows. Many companies had graphic GUI shells on top of MS-DOS.
There could have been a very interesting battle between MS and Lotus if MS did not have the DOS contract.
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And yes the previous paragraph in that link backs up what I say, the OS war was already over, CP/M had won and even though the IBM PC didn't get CP/M the api calls in MSDOS were close enough and the architecture were close enough that porting CP/M software over was trivial. Many seem to think that IBM/Intel/microsoft won the OS war but what I'm saying is it was already won before that. Thats why Commodore didn't have a chance unless the Amiga could have ran CP/M software.
The OS Wars were hardly over.
CP/M was popular in businesses, but the C64 was outselling everything, everywhere else.
But even then, those CP/M installs were quirky and machine dependent. CP/M and MP/M differences, competing with the enormous variety of mini-computers (Dec, Prime, Data General, Alpha Micro, Pick, BASIC-4). This was the pre-Unix explosion that swept the mini computer market like CP/M did the 8080/Z80 market.
It just shows again how blinded by success they were at Commodore that they could not leverage their advantage to break in to other markets. The DOS similarity to CP/M certainly helped it, but that wasn't why it was successful.
VisiCalc started on the Apple, with it's crummy OS, and was The Application for Apples at the time.
For the PC, it was Lotus 1-2-3. Lotus ran on DOS, but DOS is not what made Lotus. Lotus made Lotus. They could have ported that to anything. DOS was not selling PCs, Lotus was. (Why yes, Lotus was ported to several Unix versions and machines.)
The point being, sure, DOS was like CP/M. It helped, but it wasn't the deal maker. DOS could have been anything as long as it offered some kind of command line, and reasonable abstractions over the disk, memory, and other devices (something, for example, UCSD P-System did NOT do -- P-System was much more primitive than DOS or CP/M).
Being an actual CP/M did not save CP/M-86, for example.