>> since I can only find
>> 3.31 in MS-DOS (usually with machine specific
>>
MODE.COM, etc.)
> any computer that can boot vanilla MS-DOS can
boot
> PC-DOS. AFAICT...
On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Jim Leonard wrote:
Was there ever a *vanilla* MS-DOS?
and they all came with a customized
MS-DOS for their platform.
MS-DOS was NEVER sold retail until 5.00.
Any copies that you bought before that were either developer support,
through a computer OEM, or gray market. (grey market outside of USA)
Yes, they were readily available. MICROS~1 did nothing to thwart the gray
market.
IIRC, MS-DOS versions 5 and later were mostly sold
retail as Microsoft
had mostly gotten out of the specialized MS-DOS business (due to lack of
demand) by 1990.
Starting with 5.00, MICROS~1 began selling retail.
Mostly unconfirmed rumor: ("I can not publicly confirm that")
MICROS~1's contract with IBM had non-competition clauses, and although
MICROS~1 could sell to other manufacturers (Compaq, Morrow, ... ... ),
they could not sell retail. Those clauses expired in 10 years. It is
possible that the release date and time (to the nearest 18.2 of a second)
synchronize with the expiration of those clauses.
The MS-DOS sold to other OEMs was often customized for alternate hardware.
MODE.COM was often specific to a given manufacturer, to include switching
between internal and external monitor, etc. Compaq renamed GWBASIC
("Gee Wiz BASIC") to "BASICA", in order to permit PC batch files and
documentation to apply better, etc. But many/most of the clone
manufacturers made little or NO changes, resulting in gray market MS-DOS
being virtually identical to PC-DOS. The most common customized MS-DOS
versions were 1.25, 2.11, and 3.31. MS-DOS 1.twenty-five corresponded to
IBM's 1.ten, MS-DOS 2.eleven corresponded to IBM's 2.ten, MS-DOS
3.thirty-one was the first version to handle drives larger than 32M; there
was no corresponding version of PC-DOS - IBM decided that it was time to
increment the major version number. There were some bugs in 4.00, but
MOST of the "bugs" were simply that programs that went below the DOS call
level (such as Norton fUtilities) weren't prepared for the changes.
("I know that it is buggy! Norton won't run on it, but ran fine on 3.3!")
- Infoworld
Some variants of MS-DOS 1.00 support 8" drives;
PC-DOS didn't until 3.00 (1.2M)
PC-DOS first supported 720K drives with V3.20;
many MS-DOS 2.11 variants supported them.
--
Grumpy Ol' Fred cisin at
xenosoft.com