Introduction Originally 86-DOS, written by Tim Paterson of Seattle Computer Products, DOS was a rough clone of CP/M for 8086 based hardware. Microsoft purchased it and licensed it to IBM for use with Microsoft's IBM PC language products. In 1982, Microsoft began licensing DOS to other OEMs that ported it to their custom x86 hardware and IBM PC clones. MS-DOS 3.31 was only sold through a few OEMs, mainly Compaq. This version adds support for hard drives up to 512MB. It also does not use as much conventional memory as DOS 4.x or later, making it a good choice for 8088/8086 based computers.
Introduction Originally 86-DOS, written by Tim Paterson of Seattle Computer Products, DOS was a rough clone of CP/M for 8086 based hardware. Microsoft purchased it and licensed it to IBM for use with Microsoft's IBM PC language products. In 1982, Microsoft began licensing DOS to other OEMs that ported it to their custom x86 hardware and IBM PC clones. MS-DOS 3.31 was only sold through a few OEMs, mainly Compaq. This version adds support for hard drives up to 512MB. It also does not use as much conventional memory as DOS 4.x or later, making it a good choice for 8088/8086 based computers. MS-DOS 3.30 is the first version you can install in VirtualBox but it requires you to resize the disk images. Version 3.31 is not much different from version 3.30 and installs on VirtualBox without any modifications.
Please wait, you are being redirected to the new address of this site. If you are not redirected, visit - Legacy Installer - How to install MS DOS 1.25 on 86Box?
Comments
Post a Comment