In computer news this week (April 20, 1995):
With the stock market crashing due to corporations lying
about their profits and having secret plans to delude investors, here's a
historical look back at a corporate
secret that turned out good for everyone ....
History of the Microcomputer Revolution - Part 11 -
IBM's Secret
IBM had been watching the emerging PC marketplace. By 1980
the company had made a couple feeble attempts at their own PC products. One was
the IBM 5100 computer which was a big desktop with a tiny screen, and the
Datamaster - another future failure. IBM also had entertained the notion of
buying the game company Atari and its early PC line.
IBM's chairman at the time decided to take a different
approach, and gathered a group of the company's renegade successful managers -
wild ducks in IBM-speak - to start a project code named the Manhattan project.
Its mission was to explore building a PC that the market really wanted, and to
try to end the embarrassment of the world's largest computer company being
beaten out by long haired kids and unknown tiny startup companies, and to build
it in a non-IBM company way. The IBM team approached Microsoft under pretense
of doing a market survey, requesting Microsoft to sign a non-disclosure
agreement which would enable IBM to disavow the meeting ever happened -
(Mission Impossible tactics) - and asked Bill Gates for his opinions on what a
PC should have and do. Gates had no problem with IBM's secrecy, and had many
opinions as to what a PC should be like.
His ideas included using the new Intel 8086 16 bit processor
for better performance, and desiring the computer to have better graphics and
several other features not found in the current generation of PC's. IBM soon
returned with the admission that they were interested in building their own PC
and were considering using many of Gates' ideas. They asked if Microsoft would
be able to write a special version of Basic for this PC project - they wanted
Basic to be in a ROM chip in the computer. Microsoft had already written a
version of Basic for Intel for their new 8086 processor, and readily agreed.
This new generation PC would need an operating system, so naturally Gates told
IBM to contact his friend Gary Kildall at Digital Research - who had written CP/M.
Digital Research already had plans to develop a new operating system - CP/M for
the 8086 - named CP/M 86.
But Digital Research refused to sign the IBM non-disclosure
agreement, and the task of writing the operating systems eventually fell to
Microsoft. They soon realized that they
knew nothing about writing an operating system and began to panic, but someone
remembered talking to a Seattle hardware hacker who had already built a
prototype computer using the new Intel 8086 and who had mentioned he was tired
of waiting for Digital Research - so he had gone ahead and written his own
operating system for it.
Ironically, this individual - whose name was Tim Patterson - had previously talked to Microsoft employees and had been very interested in the File Allocation method that Microsoft Basic used. Patterson worked for a local company named Seattle Computer Products and had indeed written his own operating system for his prototype 8086-based computer which incorporated a similar File Allocation system for disk management - and he had named it QDOS - for quick and dirty operating system.
Microsoft eventually bought this operating system from
Seattle Computer Products for a mere $ 50,000.00 and licensed it to IBM, which
created huge profits for both companies and their stockholders.
For Raw Bytes, this is Frank Delaney
(C) 1995 MTA Micro Technology Associates Frank Delaney
928 E. Thurston Spokane, WA 99203 (509) 624-7286/7230
Raw Bytes Computer News - KPBX FM 91.1 National Public Radio