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  2. MS-DOS 4.0 (multitasking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS-DOS_4.0_(multitasking)

    MS-DOS 4.0 [a] was a multitasking release of MS-DOS developed by Microsoft based on MS-DOS 2.0. Lack of interest from OEMs, particularly IBM (who previously gave Microsoft multitasking code on IBM PC DOS included with TopView), led to it being released only in a scaled-back form.

  3. Comparison of DOS operating systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_DOS...

    Originally MS-DOS was designed to be an operating system that could run on any computer with a 8086-family microprocessor.It competed with other operating systems written for such computers, such as CP/M-86 and UCSD Pascal.

  4. MS-DOS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS-DOS

    On March 25, 2014, Microsoft made the code to SCP MS-DOS 1.25 and a mixture of Altos MS-DOS 2.11 and TeleVideo PC DOS 2.11 available to the public under the Microsoft Research License Agreement, which makes the code source-available, but not open source as defined by Open Source Initiative or Free Software Foundation standards.

  5. List of disk operating systems called DOS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_disk_operating...

    86-DOS (a.k.a. QDOS, created 1980), an operating system developed by Seattle Computer Products for its 8086-based S-100 computer kit, heavily inspired by CP/M; Concurrent DOS (a.k.a. CDOS, Concurrent PC DOS and CPCDOS) (since 1983), a CP/M-86 and MS-DOS 2.11 compatible multiuser, multitasking DOS, based on Concurrent CP/M-86 developed by Digital Research

  6. DOS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOS

    DOS (/ d ɒ s /, / d ɔː s /) is a family of disk-based operating systems for IBM PC compatible computers. [1] The DOS family primarily consists of IBM PC DOS and a rebranded version, Microsoft's MS-DOS, both of which were introduced in 1981.

  7. FreeDOS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeDOS

    The FreeDOS project began on 29 June 1994, after Microsoft announced it would no longer sell or support MS-DOS. Jim Hall, who at the time was a student, [30] posted a manifesto proposing the development of PD-DOS, a public domain version of DOS. [31] Within a few weeks, other programmers including Pat Villani and Tim Norman joined the project.

  8. List of formerly proprietary software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_formerly...

    [112] [113] The Fourth Edition was released in 2002 under the LPL-1.02 license, a free and open-source software license, [114] and relicensed to the GPL-2.0-only license on 8 February 2014, by the University of California, Berkeley with the permission of Alcatel-Lucent, the copyright holders at the time. [115] PowerShell: 2006 August 2016 MIT

  9. DOSEMU - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOSEMU

    Simulate a hardware environment over which DOS programs are accustomed to having control. Provide DOS services through native Linux services; for example, dosemu can provide a virtual hard disk drive which is actually a Linux directory hierarchy. [3] API-level support for Packet driver, [4] IPX, Berkeley sockets (dosnet). [5] [6]