Gary Kildall creates the CP/M operating system
1974 CP/M, was the first commercial operating system for microprocessor-based personal computers that provided access to a disk drive storage unit. Unlike other operating systems fof the time, it was written in a high-level language rather than in assembly language that would tie it to a specific computer. This meant that CP/M could run on many different computer systems. Created by Gary Kildall, CP/M originally stood for Control Program/Monitor, but was later changed to Control Program for Microcomputers. Kildall started his company, Digital Research, Inc. (DRI) in Pacific Grove, California to sell CP/M. From the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s it was a widely used operating system for personal microcomputers. Kildall himself said: "CP/M was an instant success. By 1980, DRI had sold millions of copies of CP/M to manufacturers and end-users." Related information:
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