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drob518 2 days ago [-]
Fantastic article. It does a great job of describing a point in time in the computer business from the point of view of someone who was deeply inside it. It’s fascinating to see how much Peddle got right and how much he got wrong. This early on, there was little to no installed base, so everything was up for grabs and there were many companies doing the grabbing.
Steamrollered by PC compatibles obviously. At the time it wasn't clear yet that for 8086/8 you needed register level hardware compatibility, not just BIOS call compatibility (as in the CP/M days) to stay in the market. And nonstandard disk format to boot.
rbanffy 14 hours ago [-]
The non-standard floppy format was a huge annoyance for users. While the higher density formats were cool, the hardware could operate on PC-compatible format, but the OS wouldn’t support it.
ROM BIOS compatibility would have been nice, but it could be implemented at the custom MS-DOS version and run from RAM, but I’m not sure there were clean room implementations back at that point.
pdevine 2 days ago [-]
You can emulate the Victor 9000 / Act Sirius 1 computer he talks about in the article with mame. There's a lot of software on the internet archive or this machine. It's quite interesting to look at the hardware level how many differences there are in the design decisions compared to an IBM PC.
akikoo 1 days ago [-]
He got this wrong:
> PL: So you think multi-user systems are going to fade away in favor of networking?
> Peddle: I’ve believed that for a long time.
rbanffy 14 hours ago [-]
He was right, then he was wrong, then right again. He’s currently wrong.
The company filed for bankruptcy protection within a couple years. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sirius_Systems_Technology
ROM BIOS compatibility would have been nice, but it could be implemented at the custom MS-DOS version and run from RAM, but I’m not sure there were clean room implementations back at that point.
> PL: So you think multi-user systems are going to fade away in favor of networking?
> Peddle: I’ve believed that for a long time.