CP/M Low-cost microcomputer software Called at the time a "control program" for microcomputers, hence the initials CP, CP/M had become the de-factor operating system for many microcomputers of the mid 1970s, following its launch in 1973. It initially ran on Intel's 8080 CPU, but was also ported to the popular Z-80, which was itself essentially a clone of the Intel processor. It also required "IBM compatibility", but not in the modern PC sense - instead it was referring to IBM's floppy disk drive format. This was relevant because this appears to be the first time that CP/M was being offered direct to consumers, as before it was only available to OEMs - that is it would come pre-bundled with an off-the-shelf micro. There seems to be a caveat with this, as the advert states that CP/M is an unbundled software package "which can be easily adapted to any 8080 or Z-80 computer system with at least 16K memory". Founded by Gary Kildall and his wife Dorothy in 1976, to capitalise on the growth of CP/M, Digital Research's popular software would eventually be cloned by Seattle Computer Products, called QDOS (Quick-and-dirty Disk Operating System) and then licenced, and eventually sold, to Microsoft. Microsoft then sold it on to IBM as the operating system for its new 5150 PC in 1981, which it called PC-DOS. Unfortunately for DR, whilst CP/M was actually offered as an option on the IBM PC, its retail price was set artificially high at $240 (about [[160|1981]] in [[now]]), compared to PC-DOS's $40 ([[27|1982]]), so unsurpisingly it didn't sell too well[source: The many derivatives of CP/M, The Register, https://www.theregister.com/2022/08/04/the_many_derivatives_of_cpm/]. Because Microsoft had kept the rights to licence its operating system to other companies, it eventually started selling it directly to manufacturers and consumers as MS-DOS - just like how CP/M went from OEM to end-user. Kildall wrote of this history in an interview for April 1989's Computer Shopper: ~"In the early days, MS-DOS was a duplication of CP/M functionality, but at that time there was a much freer atmosphere as to what you could, or could not do with other people's concepts. This was especially true in software and there were many CP/M clones. I don't feel IBM did anything wrong - that is the way business is, and you have to make the best of it". Digital Research never really recovered from the loss of this opportunity, although it continued with several more versions of CP/M, and was still selling its DR-DOS into the early 90s. The company did however have a modest run of success with its GEM "graphical environment manager" and GEOS operating system, which was developed with Atari and used on the famous Atari ST. The floppy-disc-based CP/M software, along with documentation, retailed for $70. That's around [[47|1977]] in [[now]].