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Z-DOS

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki

Z-DOS
DeveloperMicrosoft
Written inPL/M (BIOS)
OS familyMS-DOS
Working stateHistoric, Unsupported
Available inEnglish
Package managerN/A
PlatformsIntel 8088, Zenith Z-100
Default user interfaceCommand-line interface
LicenseProprietary
Official website{{#property:P856}}

Z-DOS is a discontinued OEM version of Microsoft’s MS-DOS specifically adapted to run on the hardware of the Zenith Z-100 personal computer.[citation needed]

Overview

The Z-100 used an 8086-family microprocessor (the Intel 8088), but otherwise had a completely different internal architecture from the IBM PC.

At the time, Microsoft's MS-DOS was not specifically geared to any specific hardware platform, but could be tailored to run on most any system as long as it used an 8086-compatible microprocessor, a situation completely like with the popular CP/M systems of the time, which typically used an 8080-compatible (8080, 8085 and Z80 among others) microprocessor. In order to achieve this, MS-DOS, like CP/M, relied on a platform-specific (DOS-)BIOS, which had to be written for the target machine, so that the hardware-independent DOS kernel could run on it. Besides IBM's OEM version of MS-DOS released as PC DOS there were dozens of other OEM versions of MS-DOS geared to a specific non-IBM-compatible OEM hardware—among them Zenith's Z-DOS. Only later, when almost 100% IBM-compatible clones became the norm, "MS-DOS" became the generic version which could run on most of them. This generic version of MS-DOS, however, could not run on the older non-IBM-compatible machines like the Z-100.

See also

References


This article "Z-DOS" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Z-DOS. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.