On Thu, 28 May 2020, Liam Proven via cctalk wrote:
On Thu, 28 May 2020 at 21:11, geneb <geneb at
deltasoft.com> wrote:
CP/M was huge in the US, especially among the S-100 system users. It was
a pretty narrow window though - from probably 1978-1982. Kaypro had a
good portion of the market as well, but like pretty much all the other
manufacturers of CP/M machines, the IBM PC compatible juggernaut beat them
cold before they fully understood the fight. I'm not aware of any CP/M
machine manufacturer that was able to successfully transition to the PC
compatible market. Some (like Kaypro) tried with offerings like the
Kaypro 16 and Kaypro 2000, but I suspect at that point it was too little,
too late. They simply couldn't compete with the uber cheap hardware
coming in from overseas.
The $64K question is, of course, how big that market was.
For businesses, I expect it was pretty large. CP/M was never really aimed
at home users. There were also things like TurboDOS and MP/M-II that were
basically multi-user CP/M systems. Two or more Z-80 SBCs in an S-100 bus
with serial terminals. They shared disk (hard & floppy) resources.
g.
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