• Fifty Years of the Personal Computer Operating System

    From Ben Collver@bencollver@tilde.pink to comp.misc on Tue Apr 23 04:26:55 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.misc

    Fifty Years of the Personal Computer Operating System =====================================================
    By David Laws, April 18, 2024

    PC software pioneer Gary Kildall demonstrated CP/M, the first
    commercially successful personal computer operating system in Pacific
    Grove, California, in 1974. Following is the story of how his
    company, Digital Research Inc., established CP/M as an industry
    standard and its subsequent loss to a version from Microsoft that
    copied the look and feel of the DRI software.

    Early Days
    ==========
    Gary Arlen Kildall was born to a family of Scandinavian descent in
    Seattle, Washington, in 1942. His inventive skills flourished in
    repairing automobiles and having fun but suffered in scholastic
    pursuits. He qualified for admission to the University of Washington
    based on his teaching experience at the family-owned Kildall Nautical
    School rather than his high school grades.

    Dorothy and Gary, circa 1978. Photo: Courtesy Kildall Family <https://computerhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/ gary-kildall-gary-dorothy-1978.jpg>

    Gary entered college and married his high school sweetheart Dorothy
    McEwen in 1963. He was one of 20 students accepted into the
    university's first master's program in computer science. Here, his
    mathematical talents were applied to a subject that fascinated him:
    all-night sessions programming a new Burroughs computer. To avoid the uncertainty of the draft at the height of the Vietnam War, on
    graduating with a PhD, he entered a US Navy officer training school
    and was posted to serve as an instructor in computer science at the
    Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) in Monterey, California.

    Herrmann Hall, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey. Creative Commons
    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. <https://computerhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/ Herrmann-Hall-Naval-Post-Graduate-School.jpg>

    Gary remained at NPS as an associate professor after his tour of duty
    ended in 1972. He became fascinated with Intel Corporation's first microprocessor chip and simulated its operation on the school's IBM
    mainframe computer. This work earned him a consulting relationship
    with the company to develop PL/M, a high-level programming language
    that played a significant role in establishing Intel as the dominant
    supplier of chips for personal computers.

    To design software tools for Intel's second-generation processor, he
    needed to connect to a new 8" floppy disk-drive storage unit from
    Memorex. He wrote code for the necessary interface software that he
    called CP/M (Control Program for Microcomputers) in a few weeks, but
    his efforts to build the electronic hardware required to transfer the
    data failed. The project languished for a year. Frustrated, he called electronic engineer John Torode, a college friend then teaching at UC
    Berkeley, who crafted a "beautiful rat's nest of wirewraps, boards
    and cables" for the task.

    This is going to be a "big thing"
    =================================
    Late one afternoon in the fall of 1974, together with John Torode, in
    the backyard workshop of his home at 781 Bayview Avenue, Pacific
    Grove, Gary "loaded my CP/M program from paper tape to the diskette
    and 'booted' CP/M from the diskette, and up came the prompt: *."

    "This may have been one of the most exciting days of my life, except,
    of course, when I visited Niagara Falls," he exclaimed. We now have
    the power of an IBM S/370 [mainframe computer] at our fingertips."
    This is going to be a "big thing," they told each other and "retired
    for the evening to take on the simpler task of emptying a jug of
    not-so-good red wine ... and speculating on the future of our new
    software tool."

    By successfully booting a computer from a floppy disk drive, they had
    given birth to an operating system that, together with the
    microprocessor and the disk drive, would provide one of the key
    building blocks of the personal computer revolution. While they knew
    it was important, neither realized the extraordinary impact it would
    have on their lives and times.

    781 Bayview Avenue, Pacific Grove, circa 1974. Photo: Courtesy
    Kildall Family
    <https://computerhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/
    Kildall-home.jpg>

    As Intel expressed no interest in CP/M, Gary was free to exploit the
    program on his own and sold the first license in 1975. He continued
    teaching part-time at NPS, and in 1976, with his wife Dorothy as
    cofounder, they established Intergalactic Digital Research to pursue
    commercial opportunities. They shortened the company name to Digital
    Research Inc. (DRI) when it became available.

    Glenn Ewing, a former NPS student, approached DRI with the
    opportunity to license CP/M for a new family of disk subsystems for fast-growing microcomputer maker IMSAI Inc. Reluctant to adapt the
    code for another controller, Gary worked with Glen Ewing to split out
    the hardware dependent-portions so they could be incorporated into a
    separate piece of code called the BIOS (Basic Input Output System).

    Before CP/M, computer manufacturers designed their operating systems
    to work only with their own hardware and peripheral equipment. An IBM
    OS would only work with IBM computers; a Burroughs OS would only work
    with Burroughs computers, etc. Applications had to be written for
    each computer's specific OS. Such "closed systems" made it difficult
    or impossible to mix and match the best pieces of equipment and
    software applications programs from different manufacturers.

    The BIOS code allowed all Intel and compatible microprocessor-based
    computers from other manufacturers to run CP/M on any new hardware.
    This capability stimulated the rise of an independent software
    industry by expanding the market's potential size for each product. A
    single program could run without modification on computers supplied
    by multiple manufacturers, laying an essential foundation for the
    personal computer revolution.

    DRI advertisement from 1978 <https://computerhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/
    DRI-ad-1978.png>

    Dorothy and Gary opened their first office at 716 Lighthouse Avenue,
    Pacific Grove, on the upper floor, with a view of Monterey Bay. They
    sold CP/M disks via mail order and walked to the post office every
    workday to pick up checks resulting from ads placed in industry
    magazines such as Byte and Dr. Dobbs' Journal of Computer
    Calisthenics and Orthodontia.

    A licensing deal with computer manufacturer IMSAI bestowed
    credibility across the industry. CP/M became accepted as a standard
    and was offered by most early personal computer vendors, including
    pioneers Altair, Amstrad, Kaypro, and Osborne.

    Outside the DRI office at 801 Lighthouse Avenue in November 1980.
    Photo: John Pierce
    <https://computerhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/ DRI-office-1980-861x1024.jpg>

    In 1978, revenue topped $100,00 per month, and DRI purchased a
    Victorian house at 801 Lighthouse Avenue for the company
    headquarters. By 1980, DRI employed more than 20 people, and Fortune
    magazine reported that the company generated revenue of $3.5 million,
    five times the revenue of Microsoft at that time. Gary also acquired
    a Piper aircraft that allowed him to fly from Monterey to meet
    regularly with his customers in Silicon Valley and beyond.

    To accommodate the expanding engineering staff hired to service the
    hundreds of different computer models used by more than a million
    people worldwide, DRI purchased a 1909 American Foursquare-style
    residence at 734 Lighthouse. Today, it houses the offices of the
    Carmel Pine Cone newspaper.

    Gary in 734 Lighthouse Avenue. Photo: John Pierce <https://computerhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/ Gary-Kildall-Lighthouse-Ave.jpg>

    One Friday afternoon, Gary called the engineering staff together and
    announced that he would give them all a raise over the weekend. On
    Monday, when they returned to work, contractors began raising the
    building to make room in the basement for a new Digital Equipment
    Corporation VAX 11/750 computer system. After several weeks,
    supported by heavy wooden beams and house jacks, the engineers' desks
    were five feet higher.

    By 1983, DRI's annual sales reached $45 million. The company employed
    over 500 people, including more than 100 engineers, and had expanded
    into another building at 160 Central Avenue, which today houses the
    Monterey Bay Aquarium's offices.

    The IBM PC Effect
    =================
    In 1980, IBM established a new business division in Boca Raton,
    Florida, to develop a desktop computer for the mass market. To get
    the IBM PC, as it became known, to market as quickly as possible,
    they used commercially available components, including an Intel
    microprocessor chip. Bill Gates knew Gary from early discussions
    about merging their companies and setting up shop in Pacific Grove,
    so when an IBM procurement team visited Microsoft to license the
    BASIC interpreter program, he referred them to DRI for an operating
    system.

    Gary at Monterey Airport with his Piper Aerostar.
    Photo: Tom Rolander
    <https://computerhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/ Gary-Kildall-Monterey-airport-1024x703.jpg>

    When the IBM team arrived in Pacific Grove, they met in the morning
    with Dorothy and DRI attorney Gerry Davis to agree on the terms of a non-disclosure agreement. Gary, who had flown his aircraft to Oakland
    to meet an important customer, returned in the afternoon, as
    scheduled, to discuss technical matters. IBM wished to purchase CP/M
    outright, whereas DRI sought a per-copy royalty payment in order to
    protect its existing base of business. The meeting ended in an
    impasse over financial terms, but Gary believed they had essentially
    agreed to do business.

    Kildall tried to renew the negotiations a couple of weeks later. IBM
    did not respond because, in the meantime, Bill Gates purchased an OS
    from Seattle Computer Products that was written to emulate the look
    and feel of CP/M. He then sold a one-time, non-exclusive license to
    IBM, which used the designation PC DOS. With great foresight, he
    retained the right to license the product to others as MS-DOS.

    When Gary learned of this transaction, he threatened IBM with a
    lawsuit over what he believed was an illegal copy of CP/M. IBM
    responded by agreeing to fund DRI to adapt CP/M for the PC and to
    make both brands of OS available to customers. With CP/M's reputation
    and enhanced features, DRI believed customers would opt for the
    better product.

    IBM announced the PC on August 12, 1981, but with the PC-DOS list
    price set at $40 versus $240 for CP/M, most customers simply chose
    the former as the lower-cost option. Attorney Gerry Davis recalled
    that "IBM clearly betrayed the impression they gave Gary and me."

    Aftermath
    =========
    DRI continued to thrive for several years with a multi-tasking
    operating system for the IBM PC-XT and a host of new products. The
    company also introduced operating systems with windowing capability
    and menu-driven user interfaces years before Apple and Microsoft.

    At its peak, DRI employed over 500 people and opened operations in
    Asia and Europe. However, by the mid-1980s, in the struggle with the
    juggernaut created by the combined efforts of IBM and Microsoft, DRI
    had lost the basis of its operating systems business.

    Dispirited, Gary, who never relished the responsibility of managing a
    large company or displayed the cut-throat business acumen of a Gates,
    sold the company to Novell Inc. of Provo, Utah, in 1991. Ultimately,
    Novell closed the California operation and, in 1996, disposed of the
    assets to Caldera, Inc., which used DRI intellectual property assets
    to prevail in a lawsuit against Microsoft.

    In other pursuits, Gary founded KnowledgeSet with his friend and DRI
    VP of engineering, Tom Rolander, where they created the first CD-ROM encyclopedia for Grolier.

    In an oral history for the Computer History Museum, Brian Halla,
    Intel's technical liaison to DRI, recalls that Gary "showed me this
    VAX 11/780 that he had running in his basement, and he was so proud
    of it, and he said, 'I figured out a way to have a computer generate animation,' and he said, 'Watch this. And he runs a demo of a Coke
    bottle that starts real slowly and starts spinning, and so as maybe
    several months went by, he lost interest in this, and he sold his
    setup to a little company called Pixar.'"

    Kildall continued to innovate after selling DRI. He moved to Austin,
    Texas, where he founded Prometheus Light and Sound to explore
    wireless home networking technology and participated in charitable
    work for pediatric AIDS.

    Gary Kildall died in 1996 at age 52 following an accident in
    Monterey. His ashes are buried in Seattle, the hometown he shared
    with Bill Gates. Dorothy McEwan Kildall purchased the Holman Ranch in
    Carmel Valley and served on many community boards, including the
    Heritage Society of Pacific Grove. She died in 2005.

    The Legacy of Gary Kildall
    ==========================
    In 1995, the Software and Information Industry Association presented
    Gary Kildall with a posthumous Lifetime Achievement Award, citing
    eight significant areas in which he contributed to the microcomputer
    industry.

    In an obituary published in the Microprocessor Report in 1994, his
    friend, the late John Wharton, commented, "I don't think Gary ever
    really begrudged Bill Gates his business success or his personal
    fortune. ... what I think Gary wanted most was to share his
    excitement and enthusiasm for computers and technology with others."

    Gary Kildall in 1988 Photo: Copyright Tom O'Neal, Carmel Valley, CA <https://computerhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/ gary-kildall-729x1024.jpg>

    On April 25, 2014, the Institute of Electrical and Electronic
    Engineering, "The world's largest professional association for the
    advancement of technology," installed a bronze IEEE Milestone in
    Electrical Engineering and Computing plaque outside the former DRI
    headquarters at 801 Lighthouse Avenue. The Milestone program honors
    important events in electrical engineering and computing.
    Achievements such as Thomas Edison's electric light bulb, Marconi's
    wireless communications, and Bell Labs' first transistor are
    recognized with plaques in appropriate locations.

    <https://ethw.org/Milestones:
    The_CP/M_Microcomputer_Operating_System,_1974>

    <https://computerhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/ IEEE-CPM-plaque-1024x682.jpg>

    The citation reads: "Dr. Gary A. Kildall demonstrated the first
    working prototype of CP/M (Control Program for Microcomputers) in
    Pacific Grove in 1974. Together with his invention of the BIOS (Basic
    Input Output System), Kildall's operating system allowed a
    microprocessor-based computer to communicate with a disk drive
    storage unit and provided an important foundation for the personal
    computer revolution."

    In 2017, US Navy dignitaries, friends, family, and peers gathered to
    celebrate the dedication of the Gary A. Kildall Conference Room on
    the Naval Postgraduate School campus in Monterey. The ceremony
    included the installation of a duplicate of the IEEE plaque in the
    conference room.

    Despite this wide recognition of his technical accomplishments,
    Gary's legacy remains mired in a tangle of myths and conspiracy
    theories. The most persistent being driven by a 1982 comment
    attributed to Bill Gates and published in the London Times newspaper
    that "Gary was out flying when IBM came to visit, and that's why they
    did not get the contract."

    The former editor of the Times, Harold Evans, atoned for that story
    in a PBS documentary and his book They Made America: Two Centuries of Innovators from the Steam Engine to the Search Engine. The subtitle
    of the chapter on Gary, "He saw the future and made it work. He was
    the true founder of the personal computer revolution and the father
    of PC software," offers a sympathetic telling of the life and times
    of the entrepreneurial genius who helped give birth to the PC
    operating system 50 years ago this year.

    Additional information at the Computer History Museum =====================================================
    Comments in quotes in this article without source attribution are
    from Gary's unpublished draft of Computer Connections: People,
    Places, and Events in the Evolution of the Personal Computer
    Industry, written in 1993. The Kidall family has authorized the
    online publication of extracts from this memoir in the blog
    Gary Kidall: In His Own Words.

    <https://computerhistory.org/blog/in-his-own-words-gary-kildall/>

    The Computer History Museum has also made the source code of several
    early releases of CP/M available for non-commercial use.

    <https://computerhistory.org/blog/
    early-digital-research-cpm-source-code/>

    A search for "Kildall" in the CHM collection catalog yields 45
    records comprising objects, documents, and images, including a video
    of the 2014 CP/M IEEE Milestone Dedication event.

    <https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/search/?s=kildall>

    <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HO6IPpL0y8g&t=151s>

    From: <https://computerhistory.org/blog/ fifty-years-of-the-personal-computer-operating-system/>
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  • From Kerr-Mudd, John@admin@127.0.0.1 to comp.misc on Tue Apr 23 09:06:24 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.misc

    On Tue, 23 Apr 2024 04:26:55 -0000 (UTC)
    Ben Collver <bencollver@tilde.pink> wrote:

    Fifty Years of the Personal Computer Operating System =====================================================
    By David Laws, April 18, 2024

    []


    Gary Kildall died in 1996 at age 52 following an accident in

    Eh?
    Wikipedia says:
    Gary Arlen Kildall (/ˈkɪldˌɔːl/; May 19, 1942 – July 11, 1994) w


    []
    --
    Bah, and indeed Humbug.
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