Microsoft today is a huge company, with thousands of employees in hundreds
of buildings all around Redmond, Washington. That was hardly the case in
1983, when I first saw the product that was destined to evolve into Windows.
Microsoft's headquarters were merely a small building next to the
Burgermaster in Bellevue, another Seattle suburb. Then eight years old, the
company had grown to about 400 people. It was primarily known as the maker
of BASIC programs for many systems, and of MS-DOS, an operating system it
had sold to IBM a few years earlier.

Many different companies during that period made computers that ran MS-DOS,
but the problem was that these computers weren't all compatible with one
another. IBM's version, called PC-DOS, was one standard, but companies like
Digital Equipment Corp., Texas Instruments, and HP all made systems with
different graphics devices.

Over the next few years, the industry would move to a world of "IBM
compatibility," but many of these systems couldn't run applications designed
specifically for the IBM PC.

< snip >

http://www.pcmag.com/print_article2/0,1217,a=161977,00.asp



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