On Mon, Jun 05, 2023 at 10:28:26PM -0700, Tom Gardner via cctalk wrote:
Hi:
Doing some research for historical purposed – no litigation at all – trying to identify
the first “legal” PC-DOS compatible PC, “legal” in the sense that it’s BIOS was not a copy
of an IBM BIOS. Eagle gets the honor of being first MS-DOS compatible and getting sued
for copying IBM’s BIOS 😊
The Compaq Portable which shipped in November 1982 is generally credited with the first
legal MS-DOS compatible PC. AFAIK it could not run PC-DOS and those applications which
depended upon certain IBM BIOS commands would fail.
The first “legal” BIOS is generally considered to be from Phoenix which was announced in
May 1984 and so far I have been unable to determine its first system deployments. FWIW
Wikipedia points to HP, Tandy and AT&T as some time adopters of a Phoenix BIOS but my
research so far is that Tandy’s T1000 family announced in October and November of 1984 was
the first system to be PC-DOS compatible and it did not use a Phoenix BIOS! Such PC-DOS
compatible HP and AT&T systems were much later and the Tandy BIOS was written by
programmers of Tandon Corporation, the OEM supplier of the first Tandy T1000s.
FWIW I worked at a company here in Ottawa. Dynalogic. We produced a
IBM look alike which had a BIOS not copied from the original IBM PC.
In fact we used different UARTs and graphics card.
Although I was not on the Bios team Don Bailey was.
http://www.sce.carleton.ca/faculty/bailey/bailey_bio.shtml
https://museum.eecs.yorku.ca/collections/show/7
Can anyone identify a PC-DOS compatible PC announced earlier than October 1984?
Citations would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Tom
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