Found a lot more on Gary Kildall and how MS became the defacto OS.
I'd read about all the funny business with IBM, DR-DOS, Gates et al in the past but I never really understood the complete origins til I read these articles. Kildall was the real brain behind the computer's OS origin and development. The only claim to fame Gates has is his aggressive business attitude.
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IBM then talked to a small company called Microsoft. Microsoft was a language vendor. Bill Gates and Paul Allen had written Microsoft BASIC and were selling it on punched tape or disk to early PC hobbyists, which was probably a step up from the company's original name and goal - they were Traf-O-Data before, making car counters for highway departments.
After buying the rights to a system with obvious similarities to Kildall's, Gates rewrote and 'tuned up' the code but ultimately it was only 4000 lines. Even at that it was still a mess.
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IBM subjected the operating system to an extensive quality-assurance program, reportedly found well over 300 bugs, and decided to rewrite the programs. This is why PC-DOS is copyrighted by both IBM and Microsoft.
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The last straw was when the University of Washington in 1992 invited Kildall to attend the 25th anniversary of its computer science program. He was one of its earliest and most distinguished graduates, earning a PhD, yet they had picked as keynote speaker Gates, a Harvard dropout. Kildall says it was this dig that prompted him to write his memoir. "Well, it seems to me that he did have an education to get there. It happened to be mine, not his," Kildall wrote.
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/conte...05109_mz063.htmhttp://www.digitalresearch.biz/Gary.Kildall.htmhttp://www.digitalresearch.biz/HISZMSD.HTMhttp://www.digitalresearch.biz/EUBANKS.HTM