Why "C" is the Default Hard Drive Designation on Many PCs?

For nearly as long as hard disk drives have been placed in personal
computers running certain popular operating systems (notably
MS-DOS/Windows), the primary hard disk has been designated with the
letter “C”.  But why?

 The idea for designating different storage devices with simple
letters is generally attributed to IBM’s virtual machine operating
systems developed in the 1960s, starting with their CP-40 and CP/CMS
systems, and later very notably, among others, copied by the CP/M
operating system created by the company Digital Research, Inc. In the
early systems (CP/CMS) the letters were used mostly to designated
logical drives, although later (such as with CP/M), they were used to
specify physical storage devices.

 This all brings us to 1980 when IBM attempted to use the relatively
popular CP/M operating system on the IBM Personal Computer.  Talks
broke down between IBM and Digital Research, Inc, for reasons not
totally clear today. The trouble is rumored to have started when
Dorothy Kildall, the wife of CP/M creator Gary Kildall, refused to
sign a non-disclosure agreement with IBM at the start of the
negotiations. She supposedly told them she would not sign such a
document without speaking with her husband first, who was out of town
on business. This was a somewhat unusual move as Gary often left such
business negotiations to her anyway.

 This refusal to sign the non-disclosure agreement, which purportedly
greatly annoyed the IBM representatives, was all supposedly at the
advice of Gerry Davis, Digital Research’s attorney. But given this
sort of thing is standard practice for many business negotiations, the
whole thing seems decidedly odd looking back, with those involved not
helping with their conflicting accounts.

 What happened after isn’t any clearer. Gary Kildall later claimed,
upon returning from his little business trip, he and his wife reached
a handshake agreement with IBM’s representative, Jack Sams, while
aboard a flight to a vacation the couple were taking. He claimed IBM
didn’t honor that agreement.  Sams said that none of that ever
happened.

 Whatever the case, what we do know for sure is that IBM moved on from
the then relatively popular CP/M to instead dealing with Microsoft,
who in turn purchased a license to a CP/M clone called 86-DOS. They
then adapted 86-DOS for IBM’s new PC, with a few significant changes
thrown in, and branded it MS-DOS, though called PC DOS by IBM.

 Being based on a CP/M clone, among other things, MS-DOS borrowed the
disk drive lettering schema from CP/M, which had borrowed it from the
aforementioned previous IBM systems. By copying many elements of the
CP/M system, it allowed popular software packages that could run on
CP/M to be relatively easily ported over to MS-DOS and used on the new
IBM PC.

 This all brings us back to the specific drive lettering schema. Early
PCs didn’t usually come with internal mass-storage devices due to the
expense (though HDDs had been around since the 1950s). Instead, they
generally had some form of a “floppy” disk reader, such as those used
to read 5 1/4″ floppy disks, initially labeled as “A” in MS-DOS and
certain other operating systems. Some systems came with two such
floppy disk drives necessitating the need for a “B”. When the 3.5″
floppy disk (which wasn’t actually floppy at all unless you took it
apart to get at its innards) was commonly added, using both “A” and
“B” for floppy drives was firmly entrenched.

 When hard disk drives became standard in most PCs in the later 1980s,
since the first two letters were already commonly used for these
floppy drives, they logically labeled the third storage device “C”,
even though it now tended to be the main storage medium for the
computer, including usually containing the operating system.

 Despite that exceptionally few systems today still contain floppy
disk drives, this schema of drive designation has stuck around anyway,
with “A” and “B” often still by default reserved for floppy drives. Of
course, these letters aren’t set in stone on modern systems and you
can easily change, remove or add drive letters (representing both
physical and logical drives) if you have administrative rights.

Source:
http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2015/04/c-drive-default-windows-based-computers-2/

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Hozefa...



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